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Uncovering How Cells Cover Gaps
Researchers at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg, Germany, came a step closer to understanding how cells close gaps not only during embryonic development but also duringwound healing. Their study, published this week in the journal Cell, uncovers a fundamental misconception in the previous explanation for a developmental process called dorsal closure.
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HHS Secretary Sebelius Picks Georgetown's Mann To Head Center For Medicaid And State Operations
HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius on Friday appointed Cindy Mann, director of Georgetown University"s Center for Children and Families, to head the Center for Medicaid and State Operations, a division of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, BNA reports. Mann is a former director of the Family and Children"s Health Programs at CMSO from 1999 to 2001. Sebelius said Mann has been "instrumental in recent efforts to expand health care coverage in our country." She added that Mann"s "knowledge of health care issues and management experience will be a great asset to CMSO and to the millions of Americans who rely on Medicaid" (BNA, 6/1).
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Two Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Scientists Receive Presidential Early Career Award
President Obama has announced that two Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center investigators have been awarded the nation"s highest honor for scientists at the beginning of their independent research careers. Basic scientist Harmit Singh Malik, Ph.D., and cancer-prevention researcher Ulrike "Riki" Peters, Ph.D., are among 100 researchers to receive the prestigious 2008 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE). Each will be honored in a ceremony this fall at the White House.
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Existing Parkinson's Disease Drug May Fight Drug-Resistant TB

Existing drugs used in the treatment of Parkinson"s disease could be repositioned for use in the treatment of extreme drug-resistant tuberculosis, which kills about 2 million people each year, according to a study led by researchers at the University of California, San Diego. The rise of these strains of TB throughout the world, including industrialized countries, poses a great threat to human health. Using a novel computational strategy and subsequent experimental validation, the researchers discovered that two commercially available drugs, currently prescribed for the treatment of Parkinson"s disease - entacapone and tolcapone - have the potential to treat multi-drug resistant and extensively drug resistant tuberculosis. The study will be published in the July 3rd issue of the Public Library of Science (PLoS) Computational Biology journal. "We have computational, and experimental data to support this repositioning," said Philip E. Bourne, PhD, professor of pharmacology at UCSD"s Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences and the principle investigator on the project. "What is exciting about this finding is that the TB target, enzyme InhA, is already well known. But existing drugs are highly toxic and of completely different chemical structure than entacapone and tolcapone. Here we have drugs that are known to be safe and with suitable binding properties which can be further optimized to treat a completely different condition." Earlier work by Li Xie, Lei Xie, Bourne and colleagues (PLoS Computional Biology, May 15, 2009) demonstrated the value of a chemical-systems biology approach to identify off-targets of major pharmaceuticals on a proteome-wide scale. This paper further demonstrates the value of this approach for the possible repurposing of existing drugs that have already gone through the stringent FDA approval process. The researchers" methodology extends an approach called SOSA (Selective Optimization of Side Activities), which involves the use of old drugs for new pharmacological targets. SOSA involves screening a limited number of structurally diverse drug molecules, then optimizing the hits so that they show a stronger affinity for a new target. Using this method, it is possible for scientists to derive a whole panel of new, active molecules from a single marketed drug that has already been shown to be safe in humans - drastically reducing the time and cost of drug discovery. The team extended the scope of this concept across gene families by extracting the binding site of commercially available drugs, then identifying off-targets with similar ligand binding sites using an accurate, functional site search algorithm. Subsequently, working with the TB bacterium itself, they found that the active component in Comtan tablets (entacapone) is effective at inhibiting M.tuberculosis in concentrations well below a level that is toxic to cells. "Although we have demonstrated in the lab that Comtan is active against M.tuberculosis, additional studies are required in order to transform it into an anti-tubercular therapeutic," said Sarah L. Kinnings, a graduate student and lead author on the study. "Given the continuing emergence of M.tuberculosis strains that are resistant to all existing, affordable drug treatments, the development of novel, effective and inexpensive drugs is an urgent priority." The researchers believe that the systematic use of small molecules to probe biological systems will provide valuable clues about the molecular basis of cellular functions, shifting the conventional one-target-one-drug discovery process to a new, multi-target-multi-drug approach. Additional contributors include Nina Liu and Peter Tonge, Stony Brook University; Nancy Buchmeier, UC San Diego Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry; and, Lei Xie, San Diego Supercomputer Center at UC San Diego. The research was funded by NIH grant GM 078596. University of California, San Diego


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