PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

University of Toronto chemistry technology promises more effective prescription drug therapies

University of Toronto chemistry technology promises more effective prescription drug therapies
2011-05-08
(Press-News.org) TORONTO, ON – Scientists at the University of Toronto, Stanford and Columbia Universities have developed a way to measure the action and function of candidate prescription drugs on human cells, including the response of individual cells, more quickly and on a larger scale than ever before.

The researchers say their "mass cytometry" technology has the potential to transform the understanding of a variety of diseases and biologic actions, and will provide a better tool to understand how a healthy cell becomes diseased. Clarifying the underlying biochemistry of cells may enable earlier detection of illness and ultimately advance personalized medicine, notably for cancer and HIV treatments, by offering more and less aggressive options for treatment.

"We've shown that drug response is specific to certain sub-populations of cells, and gained insight into the signaling cascade that defines that response" says Scott Tanner of U of T's Department of Chemistry, who led the development of the technology used in research to be published this week in Science. "We've also shown that a drug can activate or suppress multiple response pathways simultaneously, and that these responses are modified when a combination of drugs are administered."

"Together, this suggests that the technology will be of significant value in the development and validation of rational drugs to target particular pathogens – a quantum step towards the provision of personalized medicine," says Tanner.

Mass cytometry allows simultaneous measurement of as many as 100 biomarkers – specific physical traits of cells used to measure or indicate the effects or progress of a disease, illness, or condition – in single cells, at 1000 cells per second. It applies the analytical capabilities of atomic mass spectrometry – used to measure the number and type of atoms that comprise a sample – to the technique of flow cytometry, which is a method of examining thousands of microscopic particles per second by suspending them in a stream of fluid or gas and passing them through an electronic detection apparatus. The two very disparate disciplines previously had no reason to be combined.

The U of T scientists developed the chemistry and methods of attaching the metal atoms necessary for the detection of the vanishingly rare biomolecules of interest at the individual cell level, where personal therapeutic response is defined. They also developed a unique instrument to simultaneously measure a large number of these diagnostic signals for individual cells at a high analysis rate. Garry Nolan, a professor of microbiology and immunology at Stanford University and lead investigator of the research presented in this paper, adapted and expanded his earlier work in flow cytometry to take advantage of the much higher power that mass cytometry provides.

Nolan and his colleagues at Stanford, with collaborators at Columbia, used the U of T technology to monitor 34 different substances found inside and on the surface of different cell types produced in human bone marrow, the place where all immune and blood cells, as well as blood disorders such as leukemia, originate. They were able not only to correctly categorize over a dozen different immune cell types but, at the same time, to peer inside the cells and learn how various internal processes differed from one cell type to the next. "We can tell not only what kind of cell it is but what it's thinking, and what it may become," says Nolan.



INFORMATION:



The findings are presented in a paper titled "Single-Cell Mass Cytometry of Differential Immune and Drug Responses Across a Human Hematopoietic Continuum", to be published May 6 in Science. The technology developed by Tanner and his associates is being brought to market by DVS Sciences Inc., a U of T spin-off of which Tanner is president and CEO.



The principal investigator for the development of the technology used in this work is Scott Tanner, Department of Chemistry at the University of Toronto. The instrument technology was invented and developed by the Tanner group in Chemistry (principally by Tanner, Olga Ornatsky, Dmitry Bandura and Vladimir Baranov) and the metal-labeling reagents were developed together with collaborators in the Chemistry research groups of Mitch Winnik (notably Xudong Lou) and Mark Nitz. Additional support came from Genome Canada via the Ontario Genomics Institute, the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research and the Ontario Research Fund.

The technology development project was enabled by the generous collaboration of Dr. John Dick of the University Health Network.

The principal investigator for the application presented in the paper is Garry Nolan of Stanford University. The lead authors are Sean Bendall and Erin Simonds, members of the Nolan team.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
University of Toronto chemistry technology promises more effective prescription drug therapies

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UT Southwestern researcher maps far-reaching effects of estrogen signaling in breast cancer cells

2011-05-08
DALLAS, May 5, 2011 – A UT Southwestern Medical Center researcher has identified the most comprehensive measurement to date of estrogen's effect on breast cancer cells, showing for the first time how immediate and extensive the effect is. The findings, published online today and in the May 13 print edition of the journal Cell, could lead to a new set of therapeutic applications and provide a model for understanding rapid signal-dependent transcription in other biological systems. "We found that estrogen signaling immediately and directly regulates a strikingly large ...

US medical students are rejecting kidney careers

2011-05-08
Kidney disease affects 1 in 9 US adults, and by 2020 more than 750,000 Americans will be on dialysis or awaiting kidney transplant. Despite this growing health problem, every year fewer US medical students adopt nephrology as a career, according to a review appearing in an upcoming issue of the Clinical Journal of the American Society Nephrology (CJASN). The review by ASN Workforce Committee Chair Mark G. Parker, MD (Division of Nephrology and Transplantation, Maine Medical Center) and colleagues highlights the declining interest of medical students in the US in nephrology. ...

Protein keeps sleep-deprived flies ready to learn

2011-05-08
A protein that helps the brain develop early in life can fight the mental fuzziness induced by sleep deprivation, according to researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. "It's interesting that NOTCH, a protein that plays such a prominent role in development, also has important functions in the adult brain," says senior author Paul Shaw, PhD, associate professor of neurobiology. "To our surprise, we found if NOTCH activity is boosted in the brains of sleep-deprived fruit flies, the flies can continue to stay sharp and learn after sleep deprivation. ...

Energy Digital and Energy Exposition Announce Partnership in Gillette, Wyoming

Energy Digital and Energy Exposition Announce Partnership in Gillette, Wyoming
2011-05-08
Energy Digital and Energy Exposition announces their partnership for Energy Exposition 2011, which is taking place June 15th to June 16th. Energy Exposition 2011 is where 250 companies from 32 States and 2 Provinces exhibited last year, bringing with them upwards of 1,000 exhibitors and drawing a crowd of 4,500 people from the oil & gas industry and general community. The Energy Exposition is free and open to the public over the age of 18. With very reasonable booth fees and a relaxed atmosphere, the Expo is a valuable and affordable investment for everyone from small ...

Cigarette smoking and arsenic exposure: A deadly combination

2011-05-08
Arsenic exposure and smoking each elevate the risk of disease. But when combined together, the danger of dying from cardiovascular disease is magnified, a new study finds. Exposure to high or even moderate levels of the toxin arsenic through drinking water can elevate the risk of cardiovascular disease mortality, according to a new study published in British Medical Journal. Exposed individuals who smoke were hit with a dangerous double whammy: a combined mortality risk that exceeded the influence of either factor alone. "Cigarette smoking is pervasive all over the ...

Research to target untested rape kits

2011-05-08
HUNTSVILLE, TX -- Researchers at Sam Houston State University and the University of Texas at Austin will team up with representatives from the criminal justice system in Houston to establish protocols to determine when sexual assault kits need to be tested by crime labs. "This is a problem-solving project that seeks to determine why so many kits are not being tested," said Dr. William Wells, who is leading the research project at Sam Houston State University. "The goal is to create appropriate solutions that can be implemented and to determine if there are ways that forensic ...

BMI differences: The immigrant equation

2011-05-08
(Edmonton) The obesity problem plaguing Canadians is a story heard frequently these days. For Katerina Maximova, making connections between the rising body mass index, or BMI, among native-born Canadian versus immigrant children has been the focus of a recent study. In a journal article recently published in the Annals of Epidemiology, Maximova, an assistant professor with the School of Public Health at the University of Alberta, analyzed data from approximately 6,400 low-income children in an inner-city Montreal neighbourhood who were followed for more than five years. ...

Study gives clues to how obesity spreads socially

2011-05-08
TEMPE, Ariz. – Obesity is socially contagious, according to research published in the past few years. How it is "caught" from others remains a murky area. But findings from Arizona State University researchers published online May 5 in the American Journal of Public Health shed light on the transmission of obesity among friends and family. Shared ideas about acceptable weight or body size play only a minor role in spreading obesity among friends, according to the findings published in the article "Shared Norms and Their Explanation for the Social Clustering of Obesity." "Interventions ...

Parental exposure to BPA during pregnancy associated with decreased birth weight in offspring

2011-05-08
OAKLAND, Calif., May 5, 2011-- Parental exposure to bisphenol A (BPA) during pregnancy is associated with decreased birth weight of offspring, compared with offspring from families without parental BPA exposure in the workplace, according to Kaiser Permanente researchers. The observational study is published in the current online issue Reproductive Toxicology. Researchers explained that there was a greater magnitude of decrease in birth weight in children whose mothers were directly exposed to high BPA levels in the workplace during pregnancy, followed by those whose ...

Researchers propose 'whole-system redesign' of US agriculture

2011-05-08
Transformative changes in markets, policy and science, rather than just incremental changes in farming practices and technology, will be critical if the United States is to achieve long-term sustainability in agriculture, according to a nationwide team of agriculturists that includes a University of California, Davis, animal scientist. The team's recommendations, first published as a 2010 report by the U.S. National Research Council, appear as a Policy Forum piece in the May 6 issue of the journal Science. Lead author on the paper is John Reganold, Regents Professor of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New study confirms beech leaf disease threatens european beech trees, too

Carnegie Mellon launches Human-Centered AI Research Center with Seoul National University

Layered semiconductor shows potential for next-gen data storage

Dual scalable annealing processors: overcoming capacity and precision limits

Genetic secrets of rice pave way for future farming and conservation

A vast molecular cloud, long invisible, is discovered near solar system

Extreme monsoon changes threaten the Bay of Bengal's role as a critical food source

New pests and diseases will cut UK tree growth

Elucidating the double duty of sleep in memory processing

Many paths to an angry bird

Balancing nature restoration and land use: a path to sustainable growth in the EU

With AI, researchers can now identify the smallest crystals

Every dose counts: Safeguarding the success of vaccination in Europe

Can exercise and rehab services be integrated into breast cancer care?

Simple test could better predict your risk of heart disease

Global study links consumption of ultraprocessed foods to preventable premature deaths

Accurate and rapid arthritis diagnosis in just 10 minutes

Hospital-based outbreak detection system saves lives

AACR: Topical treatment offers relief from painful skin rash caused by targeted cancer therapy

Buprenorphine treatment in pregnancy and maternal-infant outcomes

Donor lungs safely preserved up to 20 hours out-of-body prior to transplantation

Experts at ISHLT report urgent need for pediatric heart support devices

DCD heart transplantation reaches 10-year mark, now up to 30% of transplant volumes

Immunotherapy before and after surgery improves outcomes in head and neck cancer

Donor hearts are traveling longer distances with machine perfusion

Six leading organizations unite to launch the pediatric heart transplant alliance

Effect of coupled wing motion on the aerodynamic performance during different flight stages of pigeon

Cercus electric stimulation enables cockroach with trajectory control and spatial cognition training

Day-long conference addresses difficult to diagnose lung disease

First-ever cardiogenic shock academy features simulation lab

[Press-News.org] University of Toronto chemistry technology promises more effective prescription drug therapies