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STAT+: Pharmalittle: We’re reading about a Supreme Court hearing on ‘skinny labels,’ AstraZeneca U.K. expansion, and more
Rise and shine, everyone, another busy day is on the way. Sadly, gray skies are hovering over the Pharmalot campus, but our spirits remain sunny, nonetheless. And why not? As the Morning Mayor suggested to us long ago, “Every day should be unwrapped like a precious gift.” While you tug on the ribbon, we will fire up the trusty kettle for a cuppa elderberry hibiscus. Of course, you are invited to join us. Remember, no prescription is required. This is strictly cash money. Meanwhile, here are a few items of interest. Hope you have a meaningful and productive day and, of course, do stay in touch. …
AstraZeneca will resume expansion of its research and development operations in a Cambridge, U.K. facility, the first such project to be revived following the trade deal with the U.S. that included measures to lift U.K. spending on medicines, The Financial Times writes. Pascal Soriot, AstraZeneca’s chief executive, said on Wednesday that the drugmaker would invest $400 million to complete the Rosalind Franklin building that it put on hold last year, and build a new laboratory in the town of Macclesfield that would use “digital and data tools to advance drug development.” The company was one of several drugmakers that postponed or cancelled U.K. investments over disagreements with the government about increased medicines spending. As part of a trade deal agreed with the Trump administration, the U.K. agreed to lift the thresholds it uses to determine whether medicines are cost-effective for use on the National Health Service.
After months of anticipation, U.S. Supreme Court justices heard arguments about a long-standing tactic used by generic companies to carve out a distinct market for a medicine, and did not appear inclined to alter legal standards for the maneuver, STAT explains. At issue is skinny labeling, which refers to moves by generic companies that seek regulatory approval to market a drug for a specific use, but not other patented uses for which a brand-name medicine is prescribed. For instance, a generic drug could be marketed to treat one type of heart problem but not another. In doing so, the generic company seeks to avoid lawsuits claiming patent infringement. The court heard arguments concerning a case involving Amarin, which markets a drug called Vascepa for treating different heart problems, and Hikma Pharmaceuticals, one of the largest generic manufacturers.
Rise and shine, everyone, another busy day is on the way. Sadly, gray skies are hovering over the Pharmalot campus, but our spirits remain sunny, nonetheless. And why not? As the Morning Mayor suggested to us long ago, “Every day should be unwrapped like a precious gift.” While you tug on the ribbon, we will fire up the trusty kettle for a cuppa elderberry hibiscus. Of course, you are invited to join us. Remember, no prescription is required. This is strictly cash money. Meanwhile, here are a few items of interest. Hope you have a meaningful and productive day and, of course, do stay in touch. …
AstraZeneca will resume expansion of its research and development operations in a Cambridge, U.K. facility, the first such project to be revived following the trade deal with the U.S. that included measures to lift U.K. spending on medicines, The Financial Times writes. Pascal Soriot, AstraZeneca’s chief executive, said on Wednesday that the drugmaker would invest $400 million to complete the Rosalind Franklin building that it put on hold last year, and build a new laboratory in the town of Macclesfield that would use “digital and data tools to advance drug development.” The company was one of several drugmakers that postponed or cancelled U.K. investments over disagreements with the government about increased medicines spending. As part of a trade deal agreed with the Trump administration, the U.K. agreed to lift the thresholds it uses to determine whether medicines are cost-effective for use on the National Health Service.
After months of anticipation, U.S. Supreme Court justices heard arguments about a long-standing tactic used by generic companies to carve out a distinct market for a medicine, and did not appear inclined to alter legal standards for the maneuver, STAT explains. At issue is skinny labeling, which refers to moves by generic companies that seek regulatory approval to market a drug for a specific use, but not other patented uses for which a brand-name medicine is prescribed. For instance, a generic drug could be marketed to treat one type of heart problem but not another. In doing so, the generic company seeks to avoid lawsuits claiming patent infringement. The court heard arguments concerning a case involving Amarin, which markets a drug called Vascepa for treating different heart problems, and Hikma Pharmaceuticals, one of the largest generic manufacturers.
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UniQure, in ‘symbolic’ win, to seek UK approval of Huntington’s gene therapy

News of the submission, which would be the first for UniQure’s closely watched treatment, comes as the therapy faces an uncertain future in the U.S.

News of the submission, which would be the first for UniQure’s closely watched treatment, comes as the therapy faces an uncertain future in the U.S.
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Pathogenic Bacterium Rewires Gut Environment to Colonize and Cause Disease
An international research team headed by scientists at Vanderbilt University Medical Center has shown how an intestinal pathogen reshapes the gut environment to fuel its own colonization and cause disease. The team’s studies found that enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis (ETBF) uses a toxin it produces, Bacteroides fragilis toxin (BTF), to reprogram intestinal cell metabolism and generate conditions that support its growth. ETBF is a classically anaerobic bacterium that causes diarrhea and has been implicated in inflammatory diseases, including colitis and colorectal cancer. The study findings point to potential new therapeutic strategies for disrupting the growth of pathogens such as ETBF.
“Our findings suggest that disease-associated microbes don’t just respond to inflammation—they can actively drive it by reshaping host metabolism,” stated Wenhan Zhu, PhD, assistant professor of pathology, microbiology and immunology. “This opens up new possibilities for intervention, such as by targeting metabolic interactions between host and microbes to prevent or disrupt diseases like infectious diarrhea and colorectal cancer.
Zhu is lead corresponding author of the team’s published paper in Cell, titled “An anaerobic pathogen rewires host metabolism to fuel oxidative growth in the inflamed gut.” In their paper the team wrote, “Here, we demonstrate that ETBF leverages its virulence factor, BFT, to reprogram epithelial cell metabolism, thereby reshaping the gut nutritional landscape. This reprogramming leads to increased levels of lactate and oxygen, which fuel ETBF’s unique oxidative metabolism.”
Independent studies have implicated ETBF in both inflammatory diarrheal diseases and in colorectal cancer, the authors noted. “These pathogenic effects are primarily driven by the virulence factor Bacteroides fragilis toxin (BFT), which elicits a range of physiological alterations in host cells.” However, the team noted, “… the specific mechanisms by which BFT facilitates ETBF niche establishment and promotes persistent colonization in the gut remain largely undefined.”
Zhu has long been interested in how pathogens succeed in the competitive intestinal environment. “The gut is one of the most densely populated microbial environments in the body, with heavy competition for nutrients, yet certain microbes can still take hold and drive disease,” he said. “These microbes are ultimately competing for nutrients, and processes like inflammation and cancer may be ways they alter the environment to gain access to those resources.”
Though the percentage of people who carry ETBF varies from study to study, it can be a common member of the gut microbiota and is considered a classical anaerobe, a type of bacteria that requires low-oxygen conditions (such as those in the large intestine) to survive. It produces a toxin, BFT, that interacts with intestinal host cells, causing inflammation and increasing oxygen and oxidative stress—conditions that are usually harmful to anaerobes such as ETBF.
Zhu and colleagues are exploring how ETBF navigates and exploits these conditions, to gain insight into microbial physiology and host-microbe interactions, he said. Through their newly reported study the investigators found that ETBF uses its toxin, BFT, to reprogram intestinal epithelial cell metabolism.
The researchers discovered that ETBF reshapes the intestinal landscape in unexpected ways, for example by driving epithelial cell proliferation and manipulating immune signaling pathways and bile acid biology. “BFT manipulates colonic epithelial signaling and the bile acid recycling pathway, inducing a metabolic shift in the epithelium from oxidative phosphorylation to glycolysis,” they wrote.
This metabolic shift reduces oxygen consumption by host cells, increasing oxygen availability in the gut. The resulting environment supports the growth of ETBF, despite it being traditionally considered an anaerobe. “This shift increases local concentrations of lactate and oxygen, nutrients that support oxidative metabolism in ETBF,” they continued. These changes also create conditions that promote disease-associated microbial communities linked to colorectal cancer.
“One of our most surprising findings was that a classically anaerobic bacterium can benefit from, and even help create, an oxygen-rich environment,” Zhu said. “This challenges the traditional view that anaerobic microbes simply cannot tolerate oxygen.”
The team is continuing to explore how ETBF modifies its environment to successfully colonize and cause disease; how broadly the mechanisms apply across other microbes and disease settings; and whether these interactions can be therapeutically targeted. In their report the investigators stated, “… by sculpting an oxidative niche, ETBF both fuels its own growth and suppresses its microbial competitors. Importantly, this distinct metabolic program could potentially be leveraged to selectively target and remove ETBF.” Zhu added, “Ultimately, we hope to identify strategies to disrupt these disease-promoting niches before they lead to long-term pathology.”
The post Pathogenic Bacterium Rewires Gut Environment to Colonize and Cause Disease appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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Avalyn’s upsized IPO; Alector ends another study in GSK partnership
Avalyn’s upsized IPO; Alector ends another study in GSK partnership
🔔 Avalyn Pharma’s $300M IPO: The Boston, MA-based biotech is selling over 16.5 million shares at $18 apiece. The company is set to start trading as {$AVLN} on the Nasdaq Thursday … Read More
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