Saturday, February 23, 2013

Mushroom-supplemented soybean extract shows therapeutic promise for advanced prostate cancer

A natural, nontoxic product called genistein-combined polysaccharide, or GCP, which is commercially available in health stores, could help lengthen the life expectancy of certain prostate cancer patients, UC Davis researchers have found.

Men with prostate cancer that has spread to other parts of the body, known as metastatic cancer, and who have had their testosterone lowered with drug therapy are most likely to benefit. The study, recently published in Endocrine-Related Cancer, was conducted in prostate cancer cells and in mice.

Lowering of testosterone, also known as androgen-deprivation therapy, has long been the standard of care for patients with metastatic prostate cancer, but life expectancies vary widely for those who undergo this treatment. Testosterone is an androgen, the generic term for any compound that stimulates or controls development and maintenance of male characteristics by binding to androgen receptors.

The current findings hold promise for GCP therapy as a way to extend life expectancy of patients with low response to androgen-deprivation therapy.

Paramita Ghosh, an associate professor in the UC Davis School of Medicine, led the pre-clinical study with a team that included UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center Director Ralph de Vere White, a UC Davis distinguished professor of urology. Ruth Vinall in the UC Davis Department of Urology and Clifford Tepper in the UC Davis Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine directed the studies in mice; Ghosh?s laboratory conducted the cell studies.

The research focused on GCP, a proprietary extract cultured from soybeans and shiitake mushrooms and marketed by Amino-Up of Sapporo, Japan. Researchers found that the combination of the compounds genistein and daidzein, both present in GCP, helps block a key mechanism used by prostate cancer cells to survive in the face of testosterone deprivation.

The research team had earlier shown that when a patient?s androgen level goes down, cancerous prostate cells kick out a protein known as filamin A, which is otherwise attached to the androgen receptor in the cell?s nucleus. The androgen receptor regulates growth of prostate cancer cells. Once filamin A leaves the cancerous cell?s nucleus, that cell no longer requires androgens to survive. Thus, loss of filamin A allows these cells to survive androgen deprivation, at and the cancer essentially becomes incurable.

The paper, titled ?Enhancing the effectiveness of androgen deprivation in prostate cancer by inducing Filamin A nuclear localization,? shows for the first time that GCP keeps filamin A in the nucleus. As long as this protein remains attached to the androgen receptor, the cancerous cells need androgens to survive and grow. They die off when starved of androgens, thus prolonging the effects of androgen deprivation, which ultimately prolongs the patient?s life.

The team?s hypothesis is that metastatic prostate cancer patients with the weakest response to androgen-deprivation therapy could be given GCP concurrently with androgen deprivation therapy to retain Filamin A in the nucleus, thereby allowing cancer cells to die off.

De Vere White is now pursuing funding to begin GCP human clinical trials. Because GCP is a natural product rather than a drug, and requires fewer government approvals, it?s expected that these trials will proceed rapidly once funded.

?We should know within the first eight months or so of human clinical trials if GCP works to reduce PSA levels,? says de Vere White, referring to prostate-specific antigen levels, a tumor marker to detect cancer. ?We want to see up to 75 percent of metastatic prostate cancer patients lower their PSA levels, and GCP holds promise of accomplishing this goal. If that happens, it would probably be a greater therapy than any drug today.?

The research was supported by a Biomedical Laboratory Research and Development service Merit Award (I01BX000400) from the Department of Veterans Affairs and by R01CA133209 from the National Cancer Institute.

Other authors were Benjamin A. Mooso, Sheetal Singh, Salma Siddiqui, and Maria Mudryj of the VA Northern California Health Care System; Ruth L. Vinall, Rosalinda M. Savoy, Jean P. Cheung, and Yu Wang of the UC Davis Department of Urology; Clifford G. Tepper, Anthony Martinez, and Hsing-Jien Kung of the UC Davis Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine; and Roble G. Bedolla of the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.

UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center is the only National Cancer Institute-designated center serving the Central Valley and inland Northern California, a region of more than 6 million people. Its specialists provide compassionate, comprehensive care for more than 9,000 adults and children every year, and access to more than 150 clinical trials at any given time. Its innovative research program engages more than 280 scientists at UC Davis, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Jackson Laboratory (JAX West), whose scientific partnerships advance discovery of new tools to diagnose and treat cancer. Through the Cancer Care Network, UC Davis collaborates with a number of hospitals and clinical centers throughout the Central Valley and Northern California regions to offer the latest cancer care. Its community-based outreach and education programs address disparities in cancer outcomes across diverse populations. For more information, visit cancer.ucdavis.edu.

Source: http://engineeringevil.com/2013/02/21/mushroom-supplemented-soybean-extract-shows-therapeutic-promise-for-advanced-prostate-cancer/

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Mixtape: Rome Fortune ? Beautiful Pimp

I can?t claim to know much about Rome Fortune, but I pushed play on his newest project Beautiful Pimp and instantly became a fan. With production?that has to be the audio equivalent of speed-balling on ?Money Ministries,??followed by the ridiculously thumping ?Get The Guap,? you won?t be disappointed and that?s just the first two songs.?Head below for the stream/download.

Download: Rome Fortune ? Beautiful Pimp

SPOTTED: SD

Source: http://youheardthatnew.com/2013/02/mixtape-rome-fortune-beautiful-pimp/

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Cancer treatment funding in Scotland creating 'postcode lottery'

Cancer patients in Scotland are being failed by the system set up to fund treatment for the disease, MSPs have been told.

The Scottish Conservatives have called on the government to follow the example of the Tory-led coalition in London and set up a dedicated cancer drugs fund.

The Scottish Medicines Consortium , which decides whether new treatments should be made available on the NHS in Scotland, has been criticised for creating a postcode lottery in cancer treatment.

Health secretary Alex Neil said the mechanisms for making new drugs available across Scotland were under review, but rejected the idea of ring-fencing finding for a single disease.

He said: ?Scotland's decision not to introduce a cancer drugs fund reflects our policy position that creating ring-fenced funding for a single disease area effectively diverts resources away from other conditions including severe and life-threatening conditions.?

Last month Mr Neil announced a new ?21m fund to improve access to treatment for people with rare medical conditions.

Tory MSP Jackson Carlaw said the UK Government?s cancer fund, which sets aside money to pay for treatments not available on the NHS, has helped 25,000 people.

He said "cancer is the one condition" in which "we are not serving people effectively", and a "fund of sorts" was needed.

Tory policy

Mr Carlaw added: "The suspicion sometimes on our side is that the reason the Scottish Government did not introduce a fund for cancer drugs was because the initiative initially came from a Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition elsewhere.

?And that?s unfortunate if that is the impression that has been created, even if it is not the reality or the truth.?

Mr Neil said ?the fact it was a Tory government had nothing to do with our policy decision in Scotland?.

?I do remain committed to considering ways in which we can genuinely improve access to clinically and cost-effective medicines which may improve outcomes for patients in Scotland,? he added.

Labour health spokeswoman Jackie Baillie said her party did not support the creation of a cancer drugs fund because it believed there were other serious conditions that also required improved access to medicines.

She said the cancer drugs fund in England had led to a ?a bit of a postcode lottery? in some places, ?which is not desirable?.

But she added the current individual patient treatment requests system ? which patients can use to try to get drugs not yet approved for general use ? was ?no longer acceptable?.

Postcode lottery

?The Cabinet Secretary must ensure at the very least there is not this appalling postcode lottery in Scotland,? she said.

?Access to medicines must improve, there must be consistency of application across all health boards in Scotland.?

MSPs who have survived cancer were amongst those who spoke on the issue of a cancer drugs fund during the debate.

Labour?s Jayne Baxter stressed the need for a ?robust, fair and transparent system? for determining access to medicines.

She said: ?Early detection, prompt and skilful treatment and aftercare from the Maggie's Centre gave me the ability to get on with my life, to be here today.

?I count myself very lucky but I now take nothing for granted.?

She added: ?Having had that experience, I cannot begin to imagine how it must feel to be told you have cancer but you won't get help because of anomalies in the system.?

Aileen McLeod, an SNP MSP and member of Holyrood?s Health Committee, said she was speaking in the debate ?both as a policymaker and a cancer victim and a cancer survivor?.

The South Scotland MSP said: ?I?m very acutely aware of how cancer sufferers and their families feel.

?But what I want to be doing is preventing people from getting to that stage where they need cancer drugs, and that's why the Scottish Government's ?30m Detect Cancer Early programme is so important.?

Source: http://news.stv.tv/politics/214794-scottish-parliament-told-cancer-patients-failed-by-drug-funding/

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

iPhone 5 vs. HTC One vs. LG Nexus 4 vs. BlackBerry Z10 vs. Nokia Lumia 920: Spec showdown!

iPhone 5 vs. HTC One vs. LG Nexus 4 vs. BlackBerry Z10 vs. Nokia Lumia 920: Spec showdown

The iPhone 5 launched back in September 2012 and in smartphones, half a year can be a long time. Since then we've seen the Google LG Nexus 4 launch, the Nokia Lumia 920 hit, the BlackBerry Z10 start to roll out internationally, and now the new king of the spec sheet, the announcement of the all-new HTC One.

One look at the spec showdown above should tell you the most important thing you need to know -- we're lucky enough to live in a time when every platform has a fantastic flagship phone. If not more than one. And that's good for all of us.

The second, more unbelievable thing is that the HTC One vs. iPhone 5 vs. Google LG Nexus 4 vs. BlackBerry Z10 vs. Nokia Lumia 920 specs show us we still haven't reached a plateaux. HTC has a 1080p at 468ppi and a camera that's getting it's priorities straight, putting pixel size over pixel count, something dedicated camera manufacturers figured out years ago.

And 2013 is just getting started! We still have the Samsung Galaxy S4, the BlackBerry Q10, whatever else Nokia is cooking up, and the iPhone 5S, or whatever Apple calls their next phone, to look forward to.

It's a great, great time to be a gadget lover, but for today, it's a great time to give HTC some kudos for once again raising the already ridiculously high bar being set for smart phones.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/igwpYAHOrdA/story01.htm

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The Union Kitchen Restaurants Now Accepting Applications

The Union Kitchen Restaurants are Now Accepting Applications for All Front of the House Positions. Our Business keeps growing and growing and we need to add some great folks to help us. If you have full service restaurant experience as a Server, Bartender or at the Front Desk and want to join a growing and stable restaurant company please stop by either of our locations Monday through Thursday between 2 and 4:30 p.m. and complete an application. The ideal candidate will have a couple of years full service experience, a great attitude, a desire to deliver exceptional service, and believes in teamwork. We offer flexible schedules, employee 50% meal discounts and a safe and enjoyable work environment.

Equal Opportunity Employer
Please no phone calls or email responses.
Applications will only be accepted in person.
Find us on Facebook Pages or at Our Website: www.theunionkitchen.com

TUK1
4057 Bellaire Blvd.
Houston, Texas 77025

TUK2
12538 Memorial Drive
Houston, Texas 77024

Education: Hiighschool
Status: Full-time, Part-time
Shift: Days, Nights, Weekends

Source: http://houston.bigcity.com/RestaurantRetailJobs/the-union-kitchen-restaurants-now-accepting-applications/16726615

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

PS Vita gets price drop in Japan, could be $199 in US soon

vitapricecut

Sony announced this morning in Japan that on February 28th the Vita will receive a much needed price cut.

Both the WiFi and 3G models will hit the price you see in the image above. Both units will retail for $215 USD in Japan, without memory cards, etc.

I find it odd that the 3G model is getting a bigger price drop than the WiFi model, but it does appear like the 3G model was a failed experiment.

Hopefully one of the things Sony announces Wednesday at their ?Future of Playstation? event is this price cut coming to the US/EU. At the time of this post it has only been announced for Japan. We could be seeing the PS Vita hit $199 in the next few weeks.

You?ve got to wonder if that will even be enough to resurrect Sony?s struggling handled seeing as it was on sale a lot during November/December at this price and didn?t see the type of sales bump you?d associate with $50 price cuts and holiday bundles.

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Source: http://gimmegimmegames.com/2013/02/ps-vita-gets-price-drop-in-japan-could-be-199-in-us-soon/

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