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Title: Cuttingedge Discoveries Transforming Lives, Fueling the Economy


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Cutting-edge Discoveries Transforming
Lives, Fueling the Economy
THE INNOVATORS
  • Spring 2008

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ARCS at Washington State UniversityEnhancing
Quality of Life Worldwide
The Innovators February 7, Seattle
  • Stephen A. Hines, D.V.M., Ph.D., DACVP
  • Professor, Veterinary Microbiology Pathology
  • Berger Keatts Distinguished Professor (Excellence
    in Teaching)
  • College of Veterinary Medicine
  • Crystal Montoya, ARCS Fellow
  • Ph.D. Candidate, Veterinary Microbiology
    Pathology
  • College of Veterinary Medicine

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ARCS at Washington State UniversityEnhancing
Quality of Life Worldwide
The Innovators February 7, Seattle
  • Stephen A. Hines, D.V.M., Ph.D., DACVP
  • Professor, Veterinary Microbiology Pathology
  • Berger Keatts Distinguished Professor (Excellence
    in Teaching)
  • College of Veterinary Medicine

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Preventing Infectious Diseases with the Next
Generation of Vaccines
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The world has changedbecause of vaccines.
People in iron lungs during the age of polio.
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Salk polio vaccinecirca 1958
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Disease Prevention
United States
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Available VaccinesBy Year of Development or
Licensure in the U.S.
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Whats Left ?
  • All the easy vaccines
  • have already been made.

New and emerging diseases Old diseases
re-emerging
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Among the Diseases that Remain
  • Complicated, often chronic diseases
    tuberculosis
  • Moving targets HIV
  • Diseases affecting unique populations infants
    children
  • Mucosal diseases diarrhea

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Veterinary Medicine
  • Most new human diseases willemerge from animals
  • Animal models of human disease

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Equine Rhodococcal Pneumonia
A scourge
photo from The Horse magazine
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Rhodococcus equiAn important cause of pneumonia
in horses.
  • A bacteria closely relatedto M. tuberculosis
  • Babies (foals) are uniquely susceptible
  • Like Mtb, lives in cells in the lung
  • Immune protection willbe very similar to TB
  • Opportunistic infectionin HIV humans

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Our Goals
  • A vaccine
  • Implications for
  • Tuberculosis
  • Neonatal vaccines (infants)
  • Training the next generationof medical
    scientists (ARCS)

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ARCS at Washington State UniversityEnhancing
Quality of Life Worldwide
The Innovators February 7, Seattle
  • Crystal Montoya, ARCS Fellow
  • Ph.D. Candidate, Veterinary Microbiology
    Pathology
  • College of Veterinary Medicine

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My Research
  • Focuses on finding the difference between
    early-life and adult immune systems that makes
    foals susceptible to rhodococcal pneumonia while
    adults are immuneto the disease.

To develop a vaccine that modifies the foals
immune response.
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Questions to Answer
  • Why are newborns susceptible to disease ?
  • Are there specific cells in the immune system
    that behave differently?
  • Can we change the behavior of the immune system
    in foals to control the disease?

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The Immune System
  • Macrophages

http//encarta.msn.com
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Macrophages Normally Interact with Other Cells
Cytokines
  • Production of antibodies
  • Recruitment and production of T killer cells
  • Induction of fever

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The Immune System
  • Found in the plasma of blood
  • Identify foreign materials
  • Bind
  • Neutralize
  • Tag particles for destruction

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Macrophages Recognize AntibodyBound to R. equi
Cytokines
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The Next Step, Creating a Novel Vaccine
  • Vaccinate the pregnant mothers with R. equi
  • Mothers will produce antibodies to R. equi
  • After the baby is born, nursing will providethe
    antibody to the baby

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The Promise of Biotechnology
  • A healthier world for humans and animals.

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Sincerest Thanks to
  • Seattle Chapter of the ARCS Foundation
  • Camille and Jim Uhlir
  • Deb Alperin, Seth Harris, and Robson Dossa
  • Morris Animal Foundation

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Questions?

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ARCS at Washington State UniversityEnhancing
Quality of Life Worldwide
The Innovators February 7, Seattle
  • John Browse, Ph.D.
  • Regents Professor, Center for Reproductive
    Biology, Institute for Biological Chemistry
  • College of Agricultural, Human and
    Natural Resource Sciences
  • Laura Wayne, ARCS Fellow
  • Ph.D Candidate, NIH Protein Biotechnology, Molecu
    lar Plant Sciences
  • Institute of Biological Chemistry
  • College of Agricultural, Human and Natural
    Resource Sciences

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ARCS at Washington State UniversityEnhancing
Quality of Life Worldwide
The Innovators February 7, Seattle
  • John Browse, Ph.D.
  • Regents Professor, Center for Reproductive
    Biology, Institute for Biological Chemistry
  • College of Agricultural, Human and
    Natural Resource Sciences

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Changing Our World
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Using a Weed to Model theWorlds Oilseed Crops
Arabidopsis
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We Have More People Living Longer
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Improving Nutrition of Food Oils
Reducing saturatedand trans fats Increasing
monounsaturated fats Adding fish oil PUFAsto
plant oils
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Rapidly Increasing Resource Needs
NASA / Reuters
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Declining Resources
Petroleum Output will be halved in 30 years
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Chemicals and Biofuels from PlantsThroughout
Washington
Plant Researchand Engineering
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One of the Worlds Top Oil Producers
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Unusual Fatty Acids in Transgenic Plants
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The Journey Begins
  • Science research is the enginefor human
    advancement
  • Our efforts contribute to a world wide research
    community
  • To continue, we must educate and trainthe next
    generation of researchers
  • Young scientists such as ARCS graduate student
    Laura Wayne

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ARCS at Washington State UniversityEnhancing
Quality of Life Worldwide
The Innovators February 7, Seattle
  • Laura Wayne, ARCS Fellow
  • Ph.D Candidate, NIH Protein Biotechnology,
  • Molecular Plant Sciences
  • Institute of Biological Chemistry
  • College of Agricultural, Human and Natural
    Resource Sciences

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Castor OilRenovating a Sustainable Household
Item
http//media.npr.org/blogs/talkingplants/castorbea
n_430.jpg
www.diginfo.tv
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Why Study Castor Oil?
  • Many industrially important uses

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A Novel Fatty Acid
  • Physical properties a hydroxyl group (-OH)
  • Compound Major Unit
  • Biological oils Fatty acids
  • Examples
  • Olive/canola oil Oleic acid (18 carbons)
  • Castor oil Ricinoleic acid (18 carbons)

High-oleic monounsaturated
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Castor Beans Ricinus Communis
  • Castor beans contain thedeadly toxin Ricin
  • Undesirable to grow in U.S.
  • Considered a noxious weed
  • Difficult to harvest
  • Currently, the U.S. imports castoroil from
    India, China, and Brazil
  • Therefore, it is advantageous to producecastor
    oil in other crop species
  • Create renewable products domestically!

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Castor Oil Gene Transfer
(model plant, our version of the lab mouse)
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Project Goals
  • Castor beans contain 90 hydroxy fatty
    acids(ricinoleic acid)
  • Currently, we have transgenic Arabidopsis(with
    castor hydroxylase) accumulating 17
  • Not yet a marketable yield
  • ? My Hypothesis Expressing accessory enzymes
    along with the castor hydroxylase will improve
    yield.

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A tremendous thanks to
  • My Family Friends who have cheered me on
  • My Professors who have encouraged me
  • ARCS who have spread the word
  • SCIENCE ROCKS!
  • But most of all, you believe in me

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  • For more information
  • www.theinnovators.wsu.edu
  • Toll free 877-978-3868

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