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STAT+: OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma set to dissolve after judge approves its criminal sentence
NEWARK, N.J. — OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma is set to be dissolved and replaced by a company focused on the public good by the week’s end, as a massive legal settlement resolving thousands of lawsuits takes effect.
A federal judge on Tuesday delivered a criminal sentence to the company to resolve a Department of Justice probe — a last necessary step to clear the way for the settlement.
U.S. District Judge Madeline Cox Arleo made her decision after listening to hours of impact statements from people who lost loved ones or struggled with addiction themselves and requested she reject the negotiated sentence. While she didn’t go that far, she said she sympathized with people who bore the brunt of an epidemic linked to more than 900,000 deaths in the U.S. since 1999.
NEWARK, N.J. — OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma is set to be dissolved and replaced by a company focused on the public good by the week’s end, as a massive legal settlement resolving thousands of lawsuits takes effect.
A federal judge on Tuesday delivered a criminal sentence to the company to resolve a Department of Justice probe — a last necessary step to clear the way for the settlement.
U.S. District Judge Madeline Cox Arleo made her decision after listening to hours of impact statements from people who lost loved ones or struggled with addiction themselves and requested she reject the negotiated sentence. While she didn’t go that far, she said she sympathized with people who bore the brunt of an epidemic linked to more than 900,000 deaths in the U.S. since 1999.
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AI Predicts Gene Regulation for Drug Discovery Using Condensate Morphology
In a study published in Cell titled, “Deep learning of functional perturbations from condensate morphology,” researchers at Princeton University have applied AI to understand how drugs affect the dynamics of key structures within the cell. The work introduces a tool that can map morphology to functional outcomes and shed light on markers of health.
The authors examined the changes in shape of biomolecular condensates, tiny droplets in cells that drive transcription and other gene regulation processes linked to disease, including Alzheimer’s, ALS and cancer. The findings support a robust system for monitoring and evaluating cellular responses to drugs at a single-cell level.
“The central problem in biology is how do you get emergent structure from individual molecular interactions,” said Cliff Brangwynne, PhD, professor of chemical and biological engineering at Princeton and corresponding author of the study. “The key innovation here was to develop a way to learn from the images and classify the patterns that are emergent.”
The team used an advanced microscope to image nucleolar morphology changes in hundreds of human cells under a range of drug-controlled conditions. Machine learning tools sorted the images into four basic categories based on the shape of the nucleolus, uncovering “cap” and “necklace” shapes linked to cellular stress responses.
The authors ran a panel of drugs to examine the effect on nucleolar formation and measured changes in the condensate’s development. Varying concentrations caused different degrees of change in both caps and necklaces.
Two known anti-cancer drugs caused caps, while a third drug, called topotecan, triggered a new nucleolus morphology that the researchers labeled “flower.” While topotecan inhibits TOP1, an key enzyme during DNA replication, loss of TOP1 induced the flower shape and uncovered the enzyme’s role in maintaining nucleolar organization by regulating RNA processing.
“No one’s seen this flower morphology before,” said Brangwynne. “The network flagged it as not fitting neatly into the other three categories.”
The team also tested their neural network on other condensates related to RNA processes, observing similar dose-and-response results for drugs specific to nuclear speckles, a hub for messenger RNA activity, and condensates from respiratory syncytial virus.
This finding underscores the value of analyzing morphological changes. “You could be missing other important features,” said Anita Donlic, PhD, postdoctoral researcher and first author of the study. “Things that could tell you there’s new biology.”
The post AI Predicts Gene Regulation for Drug Discovery Using Condensate Morphology appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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Elicio crashes on midstage pancreatic cancer miss but will advance to Phase 3
Elicio Therapeutics’ investigational cancer immunotherapy failed to meet the primary endpoint of disease-free survival in a Phase 2 trial—a result the company attributed mostly to a disproportionate number of patients with higher residual disease.
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STAT+: Lilly’s Ajax acquisition may have been worth it
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A worsening shortage of Bicillin, Pfizer’s injectable form of penicillin, left an Arizona woman unable to receive timely treatment for syphilis during pregnancy.
Also, the FDA approved Sanofi’s diabetes drug Tzield after an unusually contentious review process, and the Trump administration has proposed closing a Medicare negotiation loophole.
Want to stay on top of the science and politics driving biotech today? Sign up to get our biotech newsletter in your inbox.
A worsening shortage of Bicillin, Pfizer’s injectable form of penicillin, left an Arizona woman unable to receive timely treatment for syphilis during pregnancy.
Also, the FDA approved Sanofi’s diabetes drug Tzield after an unusually contentious review process, and the Trump administration has proposed closing a Medicare negotiation loophole.
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