HONG KONG – A collaborative team from Hong Kong and mainland China has discovered an antiviral peptide that is a promising candidate for treating patients infected with the emergent Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) coronavirus, for which there are currently no effective treatments.
Researchers from the University of Minnesota have demonstrated that even in patients with undetectable levels of HIV in their blood – which is the goal and the usual consequence of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) – the virus persists in replicating in the lymph system.
• Galapagos NV, of Mechelen, Belgium, said its Biofocus subsidiary signed a new collaboration agreement with Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH, of Ingelheim, Germany, to apply its drug discovery services to an undisclosed target within Boehringer’s drug discovery portfolio. Financial terms were not disclosed.
An emergency committee convened by World Health Organization (WHO) director-general, Margaret Chan, concluded that at this point, the Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) does not warrant being declared a public health emergency of international concern.
• Cleveland Biolabs Inc., of Buffalo, N.Y., Incuron LLC, of Moscow, a joint venture of CBLI and Bioprocess Capital Venture, and Roswell Park Cancer Institute, published studies describing the Facilitates Chromatin Transcription (FACT) complex as an accelerator of tumor transformation and a possible marker for aggressive cancers in Cell Reports.
• Biodel Inc., of Danbury, Conn., disclosed plans to submit a new drug application (NDA) to the FDA in 2015 for a glucagon rescue device to treat severe hypoglycemia.
Researchers from the Carnegie Institution for Science have weighed in on the question of whether female mammals have germ-line stem cells that are capable of generating new egg cells. Recent reports have questioned the long-held notion that female mammals are born with all the eggs they will ever possess, suggesting instead that they have stem cells capable of generating new eggs.