Industry News
Recessive form of brittle bone disease discovered
Scientists have discovered a new form of osteogenesis imperfecta, commonly known as brittle bone disease. [ + ]
The platypus laid bare
The Platypus Genome Project is uncovering some interesting information about the chromosomal makeup of marsupials and monotremes. [ + ]
Consortium tackles the genetic basis of autism
Two new suspected genetic links to autism have been outlined in a massive international study. [ + ]
Nominations open for 2007 Victoria Prize and Fellowships
The Minister for Innovation, John Brumby has urged leading and emerging scientists, engineers and innovators to nominate for the Victoria Prize and Victoria Fellowships science awards.
[ + ]FDA issues warning about ADHD drugs
The US FDA has told manufacturers of ADHD drugs to warn patients of potential adverse effects. [ + ]
Danger: new protein super-family discovered
American researchers have discovered a new super-family of developmental proteins that are critical for cell growth and differentiation. [ + ]
Oral delivery of TNF blockers
TNF blocker a second major application for Apollo Life Sciences' Oradel platform, currently in development for oral insulin. [ + ]
Stem Cell Sciences signs license agreement with Merck
Stem Cell Sciences (SCS) has licensed the use of its novel mouse neural stem cell technology to Merck & Co for research use. [ + ]
Brisbane biotech signs Australian first agreement
Brisbane biotech company BioChip Innovations has become the first Australian company to sign a research collaboration agreement with Singapore’s Institute of Microelectronics (IME).
[ + ]Nominations for Victoria Prize open
Leading and emerging scientists, engineers and innovators are being asked to nominate for Victoria's most prestigious science award. [ + ]
Xenograph models to help children resist cancer
Resistance to glucocorticoid therapy remains an important factor in the battle to achieve high cure rates in childhood leukaemia. Researcher Richard Lock has helped develop a xenograph model to identify drug resistance mechanisms. [ + ]
Linnaeus and the natural order of things
An exhibition celebrating the work of the great naturalist Carl Linnaeus has opened in Sydney. [ + ]
Man-made proteins could be more useful than real ones
Researchers have constructed a protein out of amino acids not found in natural proteins, discovering that they can form a complex, stable structure closely resembling a natural protein. Their findings could help scientists design drugs that look and act like real proteins but won't be degraded by enzymes or targeted by the immune system, as natural proteins are.
[ + ]Preventing metastasis with molecular decoys
Angiogenesis inhibition is not enough - blocking the formation of new lymphatic vessels is vital to preventing secondary tumours. [ + ]
Queensland company wows New York
Minister for State Development John Mickel has congratulated Brisbane-based company BSD Robotics for its success at the Australian Innovation Shootout in New York as part of G’Day USA Australia Week.
[ + ]