Saturday, 12 December 2020

Biotechnology NEWS

 Early diagnosis is critical for the effective treatment of cancer and there has been a strong push for non-invasive and rapid techniques to detect malignant cells. In a new study, researchers from S N Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, and Bose Institute, Kolkata have come up with a method to identify colon cancer cells using a biomarker that can be detected in low levels in bodily fluids. 

Cancerous cells secrete certain compounds into the inter-cellular region that make their way into bodily fluids like blood, urine, or faeces. Scientists are actively researching such red flags in bodily fluids which can indicate if a tumour is turning malignant. This screening process, called fluid biopsy’, is set to transform cancer diagnosis from an invasive to a non-invasive method.

In one such attempt, Tatini Rakshit and her team from S N Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences, Kolkata, collaborated with researchers from two other Kolkata-based institutes — Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics (SINP) and Bose Institute — to identify that a compound called hyaluronan has the potential to be a biomarker for colon cancer. Colon cancer is the malignancy of the intestines and has a high mortality rate.

Cells often secrete fat-covered sac-like pouches called extracellular vesicles which contain cellular components like proteins, sugars, or nucleic acid fragments. These cargo-laden vesicles released from the cells can act as messengers to communicate with other cells. 

Extracellular vesicles coated with hyaluronan are abundantly generated by our bone marrow stem cells. Hyaluronan is a sugar (carbohydrate) molecule that helps in regenerating damaged tissue and keeps the joints well-lubricated. It also has multiple other biological functions, including the regulation of cell growth. 

Recent studies indicate that large amounts of hyaluronan are present around tumour cells. This might be because cancer cells secrete hyaluronan-coated vesicles that carry signals for cell invasion and malignant growth. As hyaluronan is easily detectable in body fluids like blood and urine, the sugar molecule has garnered attention from researchers as a potential biomarker for cancer.

Although hyaluronan’s importance is recognised, currently it is technically challenging to identify with certainty and differentiate it from healthy cells in blood plasma,” says Arun Chattopadhyay, professor at Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati. He was not involved in this study.

Rakshit’s team has made progress in this direction by devising a novel biophysical technique to target and screen individual cancer-based vesicles. To do this, they used a high-resolution powerful modern microscope called Atomic Force Microscope to hunt for vesicles. After identifying them, the hyaluronan coating on the vesicles is analysed by a process called Atomic Force Spectroscopy which evaluates their response to specific laser radiation. This two-step procedure detects and identifies the biomarker and ascertains its levels on a small number of vesicles. The technique can achieve this even in the early stages of the disease when hyaluronan concentration is very low. 

The study reveals that the cancer cells release at least twice more vesicles than healthy colon cells, and are also morphologically different from them. We discovered that the colon cancer cell vesicles were heavily coated with hyaluronan compared to their healthy counterparts,” says Rakshit.

To ensure that hyaluronan is accurately identified and quantified on cancer-cell vesicles, the researchers exploited a nano-sized probe of the Atomic Force Microscope. The nano-probe has a long arm with a pointed tip that moves up, down, and across the sample. The team modified the tip of the probe by attaching a specific protein molecule that can recognise hyaluronan. When this altered tip was tested on lab culture samples containing colon cancer cells, they found that the tip effectively locked with hyaluronan-coated cancer vesicles. 

After the probe precisely latched on to cancer vesicles, rigorous spectroscopy analysis was used to assess the density of hyaluronan. With this combined set-up, the researchers designed an ultra-sensitive tool, labelling it a nano-finger’ that could point to each vesicle, screen it, and evaluate it for the biomarker. The study also established that this novel adaptation yields highly reproducible results. 

Rakshit says that the data from their research strongly suggests that hyaluronan-enriched extracellular vesicles can be used as biomarkers to detect early-stage colon cancer. The team is scaling up the study to test the technique on clinical fluid samples.

Besides, the team believes that with suitable tweaks, this technique has the potential to be a versatile tool. By changing the binding protein at the nano-tip, the nano-finger can recognise biomarkers from ovarian, breast and prostate cancer vesicles collected from body fluids. They are now working on breast cancer protein biomarkers.

The novel technique is a commendable one,” says Chattopadhyay. Further tests to surpass hurdles like variations in the samples and overlap with other biomolecules will establish the efficacy of the method, and to become a viable alternative to the current screening techniques,” he concludes.

Saturday, 18 July 2020


Greetings from MKJC !!
We the PG and Research Department of Biotechnology & Biochemistry, Marudhar Kesari Jain College for Women, Vaniyambadi are organizing an International webinar on “Recent Advances in LifeScience" on 19th & 20th June 2020.
 Speaker: 1.
Dr. PRITHIVI RAJ NAGARAJAN
Research Scientist
Aarupadai Medical College and Hospital,
Vinayaga Mission Research Foundation,
 Puducherry.
Topic: Natural products in drug discovery
                Date: 19-6-2020/ 10:30 am
Speaker: 2.
               Dr. A. SAI RAMESH
Assistant Professor,
Department of Biotechnology,
Vel Tech High Tech Dr.Rangarajan Dr.Sakunthala Engineering College,
Chennai.        
Topic: Antimicrobial Resistance - A Global Threat                           
                Date: 19-6-2020/ 11:30 am
Speaker: 3
Dr. GNANENDRA SHANMUGAM T
                Assistant Professor (International Research Professor),
                Microbial Genomics Lab, Department of Biotechnology.
                Yeungnam University, Gyeongsan, South Korea.
 Topic: Metagenomics : An approach to understand host-microbe interactions
Date: 20-6-2020/ 10:30 am

No Registration fee.
e-certificate will be provided to all active participants on submission of feedback form.
Webinar link and further details will be sent to your registered Mail ID on or before 18/06/2020
We invite you all for active participation.
Feedback forms will be send during the last session.  

Stay home, Stay safe!
Convenors
Dr. M. Gomathi & Ms. R. Malarkodi
Head, Department of Biotechnology & Biochemistry,
Marudhar Kesari Jain College for Women, Vaniyambadi.
gomathi@mkjc.in

Tuesday, 26 May 2020

Staff Achievements During Lockdown


MARUDHAR KESARI JAIN COLLEGE FOR WOMEN
DEPARTMENT OF BIOTECHNOLOGY
STAFF ACHIEVEMENTS DURING LOCKDOWN
S.NO
NAME OF THE FACULTY
WEBINAR/ CONFERENCE/ WORKSHOP / FDP ATTENDED
DATE OF PARTICIPATION
INSTITUTE ORGANISED THE PROGRAMME
1.
Dr. M. GOMATHI
Conference on Contagious Disease Management: Perspective to COVID - 19
16-04-2020
Biological Science Forum
International FDP on Develop the ability to write research Proposal
24-4-2020
Adarsh Group of Institutions
FDP on Crisis on COVID - 19
29-04-2020
VELS Institute of Science and Technology
Workshop on Book & Article Publishing and Springer link Platform Demonstration
29-04-2020
Guru Nanak Dev University
FDP  on Be Gentle with Mind and Body
30-04-2020
SRM Institute of Science and Technology
FDP on Research activity in present world – Understanding Interdisciplinary & International Approach
1-5-2020
Sacred heart College
Webinar on Opportunities for Biotechnologists in Clinical Research or Data Science
1-05-2020
Arunai Engineering College
Webinar on The Power of A Teacher
4-05-2020
ICT Academy
National level Webinar on Birds connect our World
9-5-2020
POONA College
Webinar on How to get Research Paper Published – A step by step Approach
9-5-2020
Don Bosco College
2.
K. MUNEESWARI
Webinar on the future of Education, Employment & Entrepreneurship
5 days
4-5-2020 to 9-5-2020
ICT Academy
National level Webinar on Birds connect our World
9-5-2020
POONA College
Webinar on How to get Research Paper Published – A step by step Approach
9-5-2020
Don Bosco College
3.
S. SANTHIYA
National level Webinar on Birds connect our World
9-5-2020
POONA College
4.
P. AMUDHANILA
International FDP on Develop the ability to write research Proposal
24-4-2020
Adarsh Group of Institutions
FDP on Research activity in present world – Understanding Interdisciplinary & International Approach
1-5-2020
Sacred heart College
Webinar on the future of Education, Employment & Entrepreneurship
2 days
4-5-2020 to 5-5-2020
ICT Academy
National Webinar on the Use of Elsevier tools in Research Workflow
5-5-2020
University of Madras
FDP on Teaching and Learning with Google Classroom
6-5-2020
C.S.I. Ewart Women’s Christian College
National level Webinar on Birds connect our World
9-5-2020
POONA College
Webinar on How to get Research Paper Published – A step by step Approach
9-5-2020
Don Bosco College
5.
R.THENMOZHI
National level Webinar on Birds connect our World
9-5-2020
POONA College
6.
B. PREETHA
National level Webinar on Birds connect our World
9-5-2020
POONA College


Thursday, 5 March 2020

Gene Drives Used in the Wild


The concept of gene drives scares many, for good reason. Gene drives are a step up in severity (and consequences) from CRISPR and other gene-editing tools. Even with germline editing, in which the sperm, egg, or embryos are altered, gene editing affects just one genetic line—one family—at least at the beginning, before they reproduce with the general population.
Gene drives, on the other hand, have the power to wipe out entire species.
In a nutshell, they’re little bits of DNA code that help a gene transfer from parent to child with almost 100 percent perfect probability. The “half of your DNA comes from dad, the other comes from mom” dogma? Gene drives smash that to bits.
In other words, the only time one would consider using a gene drive is to change the genetic makeup of an entire population. It sounds like the plot of a supervillain movie, but scientists have been toying around with the idea of deploying the technology—first in mosquitoes, then (potentially) in rodents.
By releasing just a handful of mutant mosquitoes that carry gene drives for infertility, for example, scientists could potentially wipe out entire populations that carry infectious scourges like malaria, dengue, or Zika. The technology is so potent—and dangerous—the US Defense Advances Research Projects Agency is shelling out $65 million to suss out how to deploy, control, counter, or even reverse the effects of tampering with ecology.
Last year, the U.N. gave a cautious go-ahead for the technology to be deployed in the wild in limited terms. Now, the first release of a genetically modified mosquito is set for testing in Burkina Faso in Africa—the first-ever field experiment involving gene drives.
The experiment will only release mosquitoes in the Anopheles genus, which are the main culprits transferring disease. As a first step, over 10,000 male mosquitoes are set for release into the wild. These dudes are genetically sterile but do not cause infertility, and will help scientists examine how they survive and disperse as a preparation for deploying gene-drive-carrying mosquitoes.
Hot on the project’s heels, the nonprofit consortium Target Malaria, backed by the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation, is engineering a gene drive called Mosq that will spread infertility across the population or kill out all female insects. Their attempt to hack the rules of inheritance—and save millions in the process—is slated for 2024.


Friday, 24 January 2020

synthetically engineered mosquitoes

An international team of scientists has synthetically engineered mosquitoes that halt the transmission of the dengue virus.
Led by biologists at the University of California San Diego, the research team describes details of the achievement in Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, the insects that spread dengue in humans, on January 16 in the journal PLOS Pathogens.
Researchers in UC San Diego Associate Professor Omar Akbari's lab worked with colleagues at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in identifying a broad spectrum human antibody for dengue suppression. The development marks the first engineered approach in mosquitoes that targets the four known types of dengue, improving upon previous designs that addressed single strains.
They then designed the antibody "cargo" to be synthetically expressed in female A. aegypti mosquitoes, which spread the dengue virus.
"Once the female mosquito takes in blood, the antibody is activated and expressed -- that's the trigger," said Akbari, of the Division of Biological Sciences and a member of the Tata Institute for Genetics and Society. "The antibody is able to hinder the replication of the virus and prevent its dissemination throughout the mosquito, which then prevents its transmission to humans. It's a powerful approach."
Akbari said the engineered mosquitoes could easily be paired with a dissemination system, such as a gene drive based on CRISPR/CAS-9 technology, capable of spreading the antibody throughout wild disease-transmitting mosquito populations.
"It is fascinating that we now can transfer genes from the human immune system to confer immunity to mosquitoes. This work opens up a whole new field of biotechnology possibilities to interrupt mosquito-borne diseases of man," said coauthor James Crowe, Jr., M.D., director of the Vanderbilt Vaccine Center at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn.
According to the World Health Organization, dengue virus threatens millions of people in tropical and sub-tropical climates. Severe dengue is a leading cause of serious illness and death among children in many Asian and Latin American countries. The Pan American Health Organization recently reported the highest number of dengue cases ever recorded in the Americas. Infecting those with compromised immune systems, dengue victims suffer flu-like symptoms, including severe fevers and rashes. Serious cases can include life-threatening bleeding. Currently no specific treatment exists and thus prevention and control depend on measures that stop the spread of the virus.
"This development means that in the foreseeable future there may be viable genetic approaches to controlling dengue virus in the field, which could limit human suffering and mortality," said Akbari, whose lab is now in the early stages of testing methods to simultaneously neutralize mosquitoes against dengue and a suite of other viruses such as Zika, yellow fever and chikungunya.
"Mosquitoes have been given the bad rap of being the deadliest killers on the planet because they are the messengers that transmit diseases like malaria, dengue, chikungunya, Zika and yellow fever that collectively put 6.5 billion people at risk globally," said Suresh Subramani, professor emeritus of molecular biology at UC San Diego and global director of the Tata Institute for Genetics and Society (TIGS). "Until recently, the world has focused on shooting (killing) this messenger. Work from the Akbari lab and at TIGS is aimed at disarming the mosquito instead by preventing it from transmitting diseases, without killing the messenger. This paper shows that it is possible to immunize mosquitoes and prevent their ability to transmit dengue virus, and potentially other mosquito-borne pathogens."
Coauthors of the research include: UC San Diego graduate student Stephanie Gamez; Anna Buchman and Ming Li of the Section of Cell and Developmental Biology, Division of Biological Sciences, UC San Diego; Igor Antoshechkin of the California Institute of Technology, Shin-Hang Lee, Shin-Wei Wang and Chun-Hong Chen of the National Health Research Institutes (Taiwan); and Melissa Klein, Jean-Bernard Duchemin and Prasad Paradkar of CSIRO Health and Biosecurity.