BIO-MICROTECH BULLETIN Vol-5,Issue-1
Transcription
BIO-MICROTECH BULLETIN Vol-5,Issue-1
GNIPST Bio-Microtech… Exploring new horizon of life… Volume: 5; Issue: 1 CONTENTS o MISSION o UPCOMING EVENTS o CAMPUS HEARSAYS o ACHIEVEMENTS o OPPORTUNITIES o RESEARCH UPDATES o NEWS UPDTES o DISEASE OUTBREAK NEWS o STUDENTS SECTION o ITS QUIZ TIME o PHOTO GALLERY For your comments/contribution OR For back Issues, mail to: biomicrotech. gnipst@gmail. com EDITOR: Ms SAINI SETUA GURU NANAK INSTITUTE OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 9/03/2012 Mission The mission of this bulletin is to provide high-quality, relevant, and varied educational programs and opportunities for the intellectual, TE CH cultural and personal growth of all students of Guru Nanak Institute of Pharmaceutical Science & Technology. The students & staff of the Institute are proud to publish the 1st Volume of bulletin GNIPST BIOMICROTECH. We hope that this bulletin will enrich the knowledge of CR O the students and the practitioners of pharmaceutical and biological science and the society equally. We aspire to give the latest information regarding the recent advancements and its applicability in day to day MI life. We look forward to your valued suggestions, feedback, cooperation and BIO support to spread the message to all… Click here to go at the top 1 Upcoming Events The Sports Board will be ATHLETIC MEET West organize Bengal the University INTER of COLLEGE 2012, Cricket (T-20) zonal level TE CH Technology of competition, Volleyball and Badminton Tournament for the students of affiliated colleges. For further details please BIO MI CR O contact Debabrata Ghosh Dastidar, Faculty, GNIPST. Click here to go at the top 2 Campus Hearsays Guru Nanak Institute of Pharmaceutical Science & Technology had organized a Symposium on “Cancer Awareness” collaborating with Biocon Ltd. The guest TE CH speaker Dr.Tanveer Sahid, Radiation Oncologist, Apollo Glenegals Hospital, Kolkata, gave a nice and informative presentation on cancer awareness. All the students CR O and the faculty members were overwhelmed by the informative interaction with Dr. Tanveer Sahid. We BIO MI are really thankful to him. Click here to go at the top 3 Achievements Achievements of Odd Semester Examination- 201 1 . Department SGPA Suki Roy 5thsem, Microbiology 9. 8 Surjit Singh 5thsem, Microbiology 9. 6 Sourav Madhur Paul 5thsem, Biotechnology 9. 4 3rdsem, Biotechnology 9. 25 1 stsem, Biotechnology 9. 62 Miss BIO MI Nabodita Sinha CR O Chandrani Bandhopadhyay TE CH NAME Monalisha Karmakar, department of BIOTECHNOLOGY, B. Sc (H) has enhanced the pride of GNIPST by achieving GOLD MEDAL from WBUT in the year of 201 1 . Click here to go at the top 4 The student of GNIPST Miss Jayeeta Mukherjee, Department of Microbiology, B. Sc(H) has achieved SILVER MEDAL in year 201 1 from WBUT making the Institution proud once again. TE CH B. Sc 3rd year students of GNIPST, Surjit Singh , Arghya Chakraborty, Aditi agarwal and Ankita Dutta has achieved 1 st position in seminar to promote cancer awareness on 3rd February 201 2 to observe the World Cancer Day. Chakraborty, year students CR O 2nd B. Sc Satyapriya Rao of and GNIPST, Saronik Sarbarish Bose has acquired 3rd position in poster competition on cancer BIO MI awareness to observe the World Cancer Day. Click here to go at the top 5 Opportunities Biodiversity tour was conducted for final year B.Sc (H) Biotechnology & Microbiology students in Dooars (January, 2012) under the guidance of Mr.Anshuman Bhattacharyya and TE CH Mr. Soumya Bhattacharya, Faculty, GNIPST. JNU CBEE (Combined Biotech Entrance Exam) will be conducted on 3rd week of May, 2012. MI CR O Small Business Innovation Research Initiative (SBIRI) Government of India Department of Biotechnology Ministry of Science & Technology http://www.sbiri.nic.in. or http://www.dbtindia.nic.in Industrial tour has been conducted to APT software Avenues BIO Pvt. Ltd. for final year B.Sc (H) Biotechnology & Microbiology student. Month : october’2011 Click here to go at the top 6 Research Updates • New guidelines on chikungunya virus The mosquito-borne chikungunya virus has, in the past, caused TE CH massive and sustained outbreaks in Asia and Africa, infecting more than two million people, with attack rates as high as 68% in some areas. With the movement of travelers, new Guidelines for preparedness and response for chikungunya virus introduction in CR O the Americas have been launched. They aim to help countries throughout the region to detect the virus and prevent and control the disease, should it appear.(27 February 2012 ) MI for further information follow http://www.who.int/en/ BIO • Some Bacteria Attack Using Spring-Loaded Poison Daggers Bacteria have evolved different systems for secreting proteins into the fluid around them or into other cells. Some, for example, have syringe-like exterior structures that can pierce other cells and inject proteins. Another system, called a type VI secretion system, is found in about a quarter of all bacteria with two membranes. Despite being common, researchers have not understood how it works. Now a team, co-led by researchers at the California Click here to go at the top 7 Institute of Technology (Caltech), has figured out the structure of the type VI secretion system apparatus and proposed how it might work -- by shooting spring-loaded poison molecular daggers. -ScienceDaily (Feb. 27, 2012) TE CH • RNA Interference Cancer Treatment? Delivering RNA With Tiny Sponge-Like Spheres For the past decade, scientists have been pursuing cancer CR O treatments based on RNA interference -- a phenomenon that offers a way to shut off malfunctioning genes with short snippets of RNA. However, one huge challenge remains: finding a way to MI efficiently deliver the RNA.- ScienceDaily (Feb. 27, 2012) BIO • WHO upholds guidance on hormonal contraceptive use and HIV WHO has concluded that women living with HIV or at high risk of HIV can safely continue to use hormonal contraceptives to prevent pregnancy. The recommendation follows a thorough review of evidence about links between hormonal contraceptive use and HIV acquisition. Couples seeking to prevent both unintended pregnancy and HIV should be strongly advised to use dual Click here to go at the top 8 protection – condoms and another effective contraceptive method, such as hormonal contraceptives. (16 February 2012) • Heart Attacks: Naked Mole-Rats Bear Lifesaving Clues TE CH A biologist thinks the subterranean lifestyle of the naked mole-rat may hold clues to keeping brain cells alive and functioning when oxygen is scarce, as during a heart attack. CR O ( ScienceDaily,February 23, 2012) • New melanoma drug doubles survival time, study shows Advanced melanoma is often considered a death sentence, since patients will live only six to ten months by the time it's MI diagnosed. A new study of a recently-approved drug called vemurafenib offers hope, because it nearly doubled life BIO expectancy of patients with metastatic melanoma to 16 months. ( February 22, 2012) For details visit - www.cbsnews.com Click here to go at the top 9 News Updates • World Congress On Biotechnology- 201 2 Bright International Conferences & Events Organization gather up all the participants to attend the World Congress on TE CH Biotechnology which will be held during 4-6 May 2012 at Leonia International Centre for Exhibitions & Conventions, Hyderabad, CR O India. 11 Mar 2012 → 14 Mar 2012 Dates Contact BIO Location Weblink MI • In-Vitro Molecular Diagnostics — International Conference on Technological Challenges in Developing Affordable In-Vitro Molecular Diagnostics Click here to go at the top Navi Mumbai, India http://www.ivdconference.com Ms. Priya Pingale; Phone: (91-2227686226); Email: priya.IVD@gmail.com 10 Disease outbreak News • Malaria death toll possibly twice as high Malaria may be killing around twice as many people as experts previously thought, and it could also be hitting older children and TE CH adults — long considered the least susceptible — a new study suggests. • Panel: Grave threat from mutant bird flu studies A potentially deadlier form of the bird flu virus poses one of the CR O gravest known threats to humans and justifies an unprecedented call to censor the research that produced it. MI • Amateur tattoos carry hepatitis C risk In an analysis of several dozen past studies, CDC researchers BIO found that tattoos from non-professionals appear to carry a risk of the blood-borne liver infection hepatitis C. That included tattoos done by friends or family, or ones done in prison.On the other hand, there was no evidence that tattoos done by professionals carried a hepatitis C risk. (Report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). Click here to go at the top 11 • Multiple Myeloma Treatment: Experimental drug combination ‘encouraging’ in relapsed multiple myeloma SAN DIEGO–When the targeted drug bortezomib stops working in patients with advanced multiple myeloma, the patients survive only BIO MI CR O TE CH an average of five months longer. Click here to go at the top 12 Students Section SURJIT SINGH TE CH APPLICATION OF RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY IN MODERN DRUG DEVELOPMENT B.Sc(H) MICROBIOLOGY CR O 6TH SEMESTER,3RD YEAR Genetic engineering is a nearly born discipline of science which is used under highly controllable laboratory conditions to alter the heredity MI apparatus of a living cell (i.e, the manipulation of genes under highly controllable laboratory conditions) so that the cell can produce BIO different chemicals or perform completely new functions. It is perhaps the finest output from the brains of biologist who have been interested in tailoring & manipulating heredity to the best of man’s advantage. The summation of the messages highlighted by the hundreds of “genes” ,”genetics” ,”genetic engineering”& similar headlines of the last several years is that genes play an important roles in essentially all aspects of our lives. The rapidly expanding understanding of the importance of genetics & the explosive development of new tools & Click here to go at the top 13 methodologies for genetic engineering applications in agriculture, medicine, microbial fermentations& other areas now dictate areas of our lives from family planning to food production to medicinal development. The abnormalities that occur in individuals with other inherited diseases also frequently result from specific enzyme deficiencies. In TE CH principle one might expect to be able to treat these diseases by supplying the missing enzymes if adequate quantities of pure enzymes were available. In fact, given the tools of genetic engineering, there can be little question about our ability to produce large amounts of any enzyme or other protein of interest. The problem is in delivering these CR O enzymes to the intracellular sites in those tissues where their function is required. One would need a delivery system such that the enzymes retained activity during storage & were gradually & continuously released over an extended period of time. A major advantage of “gene therapy “is that once the normal gene has been MI introduced into a cell, that gene should be completely stable & should the cell. BIO continuously produce the needed gene product for the entire life of Nevertheless, “enzyme therapy” has proven effective in some cases, & should be included as one approach to the treatment of human diseases. Insulin has been used to treat diabetes for several decades. Human insulin was the first commercial success of the new recombinant DNA technologies in the field of pharmaceuticals. Other human proteins that have been synthesized in bacteria & have medical roles are blood-clotting factor viii, plasminogen activator & human growth hormone. Click here to go at the top 14 To obtain expression of human growth hormone in E.coli it was necessary to place the human growth hormone, coding sequence under the control of E.coli regulatory elements. Genetic engineering also provides an alternate strategy to the production of vaccines for immunization against viral diseases. Since the coat proteins of viruses are the major antigens that induce TE CH immunity, another approach is to clone the gene(s) that encodes the viral coat proteins & to use just the coat proteins in vaccines to induce immunity. New generation antibiotics are also produced using the cloning technique. Diagnosis of infection with HIV. Each of the three widely-used CR O methods for diagnosing HIV infection has been developed using recombinant DNA. The antibody test (ELISA or western blot) uses a recombinant HIV protein to test for the presence of antibodies that the body has produced in response to an HIV infection. The DNA test MI looks for the presence of HIV genetic material using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Development of the RT-PCR test was made possible by the molecular cloning and sequence BIO analysis of HIV genomes. HIV testing page from US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) At last all I can say is that Funding from government laboratories and agencies, small biotechnology companies and the pharmaceutical industry has been and will continue to be instrumental in developing biotechnology for pharmaceutical use. The new biological techniques have dramatically increased our understanding of many disease mechanisms. Areas of research that pharmaceutical innovations in biotechnology. Click here to go at the top 15 would benefit from ROLE OF NANOTECHNOLOGY IN THE FIELD OF DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEM In recent years there has been a rapid increase in nanotechnology in the fields of medicine and more specifically in targeted drug delivery. TE CH At present many substances are under investigation for drug delivery and more specifically for cancer therapy. Interestingly pharmaceutical sciences are also using nanoparticles to reduce toxicity and side effects of drugs. The potential to cross the Blood Brain Barrier (BBB) has open new ways for drug delivery into the brain. In addition, the nanosize also allows for access into the cell and various cellular CR O compartments including the nucleus. Nanoparticles are also considered to have the potential as novel intravascular or cellular probes for both diagnostic and therapeutic purposes (drug/gene delivery), which is expected to generate innovations and play a critical role in medicine. MI Target-specific drug/gene delivery and early diagnosis in cancer treatment is one of the priority research areas in which nanomedicine will play a vital role. In conclusion nanoparticles for drug delivery and BIO imaging have gradually been developed as new modalities for cancer therapy and diagnosis. This review illustrates the emerging role of nanotechnology in drug delivery. Nanotechnology is the disciple of science that deals with molecules of nanometeric size i.e. 10 power -9 of a meter. In the last few decades its benefits are being utilized for the betterment of human civilization. Discovery of nanomedicine has given rise to nanoparticles through which better target specific drug and gene delivery is possible. Nanotechnology enables us to deliver drug in the form of Click here to go at the top 16 dendrimers, liposomes, nanoshells, emulsions, nanotubes, quantum dots etc. for the manipulation of various diseases and their metabolic pathway. It is of great importance in treatment and diagnosis of cancer. Some recent breakthrough in the form of drug delivery are effective target therapy used in pre-sympathomimetic & diagnosis technique. drug delivery : Name of Features nanotechnologies TE CH Examples of some nanotechnologies which are generally used for CR O Developed for drug delivery applications since the early 1970s. Vesicles composed of Liposomes one or more membranes; phospholipid smallest liposomes bilayer are in MI nanometre size range. Highly branched, monodispersed structures of 2–20 nm formed by the addition of shells Dendrimers BIO of branched molecules to a central core; can be taken up by cells and, therefore, used to deliver into cells therapeutic compounds, e.g. small molecules, proteins and DNA. Can cross biological membranes, e.g. blood-brain barrier. Click here to go at the top 17 Various polymers, e.g. Polymer nanoparticles poly (lactide-co- glycolide), used to produce biocompatible, biodegradable nanoparticles of 80–150 nm; being developed for various drug delivery applications; possible to attach ligands to TE CH target specific cell types. Polymer nanoparticles coated, for example, Coated polymer- with polyethylene based nanoparticles recognition by the glycol to reduce immunesystem and CR O enhance circulatory persistence Self-assembling nanoparticulate structures in 20–100 nm range formed in aqueous media Micelles from block copolymers. Can be used to carry MI range of drug entities. Carbon isoforms arranged in a spherical cage-like structure of 0.7–1.5 nm that can Fullerenes BIO be developed to carry therapeutic agents, e.g. C60 buckminsterfullerene or buckyballs. Carbon self-assembles in the presence of Nanotubes transition metal catalysts into single walled cylinders of 0.3–8 nm diameter. Potential for delivery of therapeutic agents. Technologies that reduce drug crystals in Drug nanoparticles size to ≤100 nm. Main application is to improve the solubility of poorly water Click here to go at the top 18 soluble drugs. Biocompatible matrices with nanoporous structures within which drug is contained. Nanostructured Materials can be produced in many forms biomaterials including microparticles, fibres, fabrics, TE CH micromachined implants and devices. Being developed for the delivery of a wide CR O range of therapeutic agents. Drug delivery system and nanotechnology: At present, 95% of all new therapeutic system have poor pharmokinetics and less developed biopharmaceutical properties. MI There is no such medicinal system that delivers drug and distribute therapeutically active drug molecules to the site of action or inflammation without any side effects. This problems are overcome by BIO nanotechnology drug delivery system which possess multiple desirable attributes. Nanomedicine has a size such that it can be injected without occluding needles and capillaries which enables targeted drug delivery and medical imaging. Thus nanosized liposomes, micelles, nanoemulsions, nanogels are used for this purpose. Click here to go at the top 19 TE CH CR O Structure of liposome Micelle containing BIO MI active Click here to go at the top 20 substance Nanoemulsions for drug delivery BIO MI CR O TE CH Nanoemulsions are dispersion of two immiscible liquids i.e. oil and water, where dispersed phase droplets are of the order of nanometeric size and is stabilized by surface -active films composed of surfactant and co-surfactant. They tremendously gain importance because of their optical transparency thermodynamic stability and ease of preparation. Structure of nanoemulsion can effect the rate of drug release at the site of action. Due to their nanosize they provide much longer oil water contact area which facilitates drug release from the dispersed phase droplets. Sonication, high and low energy emulsification using homogenizers are required for its preparation. It has already been used in the i.v. injection of low dose amphotericin administered to mice, rats, dogs and monkeys and dose of1.0mg/kg. Click here to go at the top 21 Soumyajit Kar B.Sc. (H) Biotechnology 3rd year, 6th semester It’s Quiz Time…… CR O TE CH 1. What part of this human body is this? 2. A famous scientist was colour blind and was the first describe colour-blindness. Colour-blindness is often name MI after him. Who is he? BIO ANSWER OF PREVIOUS ISSUE QUIZ 1. Shilpa Shetty 2. Bomb Calorimetre is used for estimating the energy of foodstuffs per unit weight. Congratulation Surjit Singh, Soumyajit Kar, B.Sc (H) 3rd Year, Sayan Kumar, B.Sc (H) 1st Year, for the right answers. Click here to go at the top 22 Acknowledgement TE CH We feel happy in publishing the 5th Volume of the online issue ‘BIO-MICROTECH’. We would like to convey our thanks to Dr. Abhijit Sengupta, Director of GNIPST and Prof. Dipankar Chakraborty, Registrar, all teachers & students for their encouragement & support. We are thankful to Mr. Debabrata Ghosh Dastidar and Prerona Saha for their technical help. CR O We would like to express our gratitude to Miss. Tamalika Chakraborty and Miss. Swati Nandi for their kind cooperation in developing the magazine. BIO MI It would be our great pleasure to receive the contributions, suggestions & feedback from your desk for further upliftment of our bulletin and make it more interesting. Photo Gallery Link 1 Link 2 Link 3 Click here to go at the top 23