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Risk Of Discrimination For Individuals With Family History Of Genetic Disease
A research published on bmj.com reports that individuals with a family history of genetic disease are frequently discriminated by their relatives, friends and also by insurance companies.

Prestigious French Award For Heart Research Won By Olson
Dr. Eric Olson, chairman of molecular biology at UT Southwestern Medical Center, has been awarded the Institut de France"s prestigious Lefoulon-Delalande Foundation Grand Prize for his work on gene regulation in the cardiovascular system.
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Acsys Interactive: Empowering Patients And Clinicians To Co-Produce Quality Care
A collaborative team with members from the Yale Center for Medical Informatics, Yale-New Haven Children"s Hospital/Yale School of Medicine and Acsys Interactive have responded to a national call for proposals from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Project HealthDesign:Rethinking the Power and Potential of Personal Health Records, with the design of a trial involving a diverse pediatric population with multiple chronic illnesses. We will be testing whether and how information about patterns of everyday living can be collected and interpreted such that patients can take action to better manage their health and clinicians can integrate new insights into clinical care processes. It is envisioned that leading edge technology such as the Google Health PHR platform along with Apple"s iPhone or iTouch mobile devices will be used to capture the ODLs. The proposed project team includes specialists experienced in these approaches and ethnographic evaluation; in pediatric disease management; in patient-centered care involving patient-clinician-technology partnerships; in bioethics; and in IT technical development.
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Cell Cycle Kinases As Therapeutic Targets For Cancer

A comprehensive overview that explores the prospects and progress of synthetic inhibitors to target cell cycle kinases in cancer forecasts that "novel compounds with increased potency, improved kinase specificity and favorable drug like properties will soon be available for clinical evaluation." The article, which is featured in the July 2009 online issue of Nature Reviews/Drug Discovery, was written by Antonio Giordano, M.D., Ph.D., the Director of the Sbarro Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine, the Director of the Center for Biotechnology at Temple University in Philadelphia, PA and a "Chiara fama" Professor in the Department of Pathology & Oncology at the University of Siena in Siena, Italy and Silvia Lapenna, Ph.D., a member of CROM (Center for Oncology Research) in Mercogliano, Italy. Cell cycle kinases are proteins that orchestrate the complex events that regulate the proper division of our cells. When genes mutate in cancer, cell cycle kinases and/or their protein regulators may be dysregulated, leading to aberrant cell division and uncontrolled proliferation of cells, both prime hallmarks of human cancer. While numerous small-molecule inhibitors have been developed to target cell cycle kinases, none has yet been approved for commercial clinical use. The search for synthetic inhibitors of protein kinases as anticancer drugs has been boosted recently by successful approval of a number of molecules that target tyrosine kinases, such as the BCR-ABL protein kinases inhibitor imatinib (Gleevec; Novartis) for the treatment of chronic myelogenous leukemia. "Future approaches should combine the lessons learned from early work using small-molecule inhibitors with the recent increased understanding of the deregulation of cell cycle protein kinases in cancer," says Dr. Giordano. "Chemical inhibition has emerged as a powerful approach to advance our understanding of these kinases and numerous inhibitors are being developed as potential anticancer drugs." In the review, Dr. Lapenna and Dr. Giordano describe the biological activities of several promising protein kinases involved in the regulation of the cell cycle that may offer new therapeutic targets. These include cyclin dependent kinases (CDKs), DNA-damage checkpoint kinases and spindle-assembly checkpoint regulators, aurora kinases and polo-like kinases, each of which often operate abnormally in cancerous cells. The researchers note that CDK serine-threonine protein kinases have received particular attention as possible therapeutic targets, owing to their crucial role in cell proliferation and frequent upregulation in human cancer. While first generation CDK inhibitors have exhibited only minor efficacy in clinical trials, the authors say that several second-generation compounds have shown more potency and/or specificity than earlier inhibitors. Also, genetic studies have revealed valuable information for the validation of specific CDK variants as potential targets in cancer therapy. By selectively inhibiting certain CDKs, the writers hold that it may be possible to limit the proliferation of specific tumor cells which survival depends specifically on the expression and activation of these CDKs. The authors also discuss promising emerging strategies for therapeutic intervention based on inhibiting kinases that signal DNA damage to enhance cancer cell sensitivity to genotoxic agents, and targeting kinases that control mitosis to selectively kill tumour cells. Sbarro Health Research Organization (www.shro.org) is committed to excellence in basic genetic research to cure and diagnose cancer, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and other chronic illnesses and to foster the training of young doctors in a spirit of professionalism and humanism. The Sbarro Health Research Organization funds the Sbarro Institute for Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine, located at Temple University in Philadelphia, PA. Human Health Foundation


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