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Archive for August, 2006

‘Spin & Mix’ with global Advantage campaign

The autumn campaign for Eppendorf Advantage centres around premium innovative products launched in 2006: Microcentrifuge 5424, MixMate and the award-winning Multipette stream/Xstream.

Twice a year Eppendorf Advantage, an internationally recognised promotions platform, highlights particular products through both global and local distributor offers, and gives customers the opportunity to ‘Get the best for less’. From 1 September to 31 December Microcentrifuge 5424 comes with a free aerosol-tight standard rotor and, in the UK only, Multipette stream/Xstream is available at only half the normal price with the purchase of MixMate. UK customers who ‘Take Advantage’ of both these offers can also choose a free epResearch3 or epReference3 Pack containing a selection of pipettes and tips.

Thanks to new passive air-cooling technology, Microcentrifuge 5424 is faster, safer and quieter than the 5415 D which it supersedes, even without the aerosol-tight lid. Encompassing Eppendorf’s trusted brand values – precision, quality, versatility – the compact, easy-to-use Microcentrifuge 5424 is ideal for a wide range of applications in biological and medical laboratories.

MixMate is the only mixer uniting a plate and tube mixer for volumes from 5 µl up to 2.0 ml with a vortex function in a 3-in-1 format. Eppendorf perfected 2DMix-Control technology to enable high-speed mixing without cross-contamination or spillage, setting new standards in sample preparation. Full details of this versatile benchtop mixer, plus a chance to enter a prize draw and win a digital camera, are at www.eppendorf.com/MixMate.

Multipette stream and Multipette Xstream are designed to perform reliable, precise and fast automatic dispensing, with no cross-contamination even for high vapour pressure and/or high viscosity materials. Conforming to IVD and PhysioCare Concept, these electronic dispensers feature an intuitive camera-style selection wheel and a light, compact design for near-effortless operation.

Albrecht Wiener, Eppendorf UK Managing Director, says, ‘This Advantage promotion celebrates Eppendorf Innovation in 2006. To take just one example, Multipette stream/Xstream won a coveted ‘red dot award: product design’ in June this year. Red dot design award is one of the world’s largest design competitions and this accolade from an independent jury of international experts underlines Eppendorf’s success in developing truly excellent styling and ergonomics for our high-precision products.’

A booklet with further information on Eppendorf Advantage is available on request via www.eppendorf.com/advantage.

Eppendorf UK, headquartered in Cambridge, is a subsidiary of Eppendorf AG, Hamburg, Germany, a leading global supplier of systems and research tools for the biotechnology industry. With over 1800 employees on four continents, Eppendorf AG achieved a turnover of £224m (€320.9m) in 2005 and operating profits (EBIT) of £35m (€50.4m).

Discussion on the Basics of Bird Flu and its Influence on Society on a Whole

DUBLIN, Ireland–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Aug 24, 2006 – Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c41023) has announced the addition of Avian Influenza: The Threatening Pandemic to their offering.

The purpose of this report is to describe the threatening world pandemic caused by avian influenza, also known as bird flu. This report discusses the origins of the disease, the bird-to-human infection risks, the catastrophic health crisis avian flu poses, and the efforts by world governments and international health organizations to mitigate the impact of the threat to humans.

Chapter Titles Include:

1. Overview

2. Introduction and Executive Summary

3. The Basics of Human Influenza

4. The Basics of Avian Influenza

5. Epidemiology of Avian Influenza

6. Influenza Diagnosis & Laboratory Issues

7. Preparedness

8. Economics of Avian Influenza

9. Fighting the Flu

List of Tables

For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c41023

Contact Research and Markets Laura Wood Fax: +353 1 4100 980 press@researchandmarkets.com

CombiMatrix Updates Influenza Array with New Flu Sequences from the Centers for Disease Control

BIOWIRE

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Has Released Sequences from Influenza Strains Including Those from the Recent Human Deaths in Indonesia

Acacia Research Corporation announced today that its CombiMatrix group (Nasdaq:CBMX) (Nasdaq:ACTG) is making available an updated version of its Influenza A Array. Incorporated into version 3.0 are the new sequences that have been released by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which include the strains from the recent infections and deaths in Indonesia.

For more information about the CDC’s release, see the following link: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/C/CDC_FLU_GENES?SITE=AP& SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2006-08-23-01-15-16. (Due to its length, this URL may need to be copied/pasted into your Internet browser’s address field. Remove the extra space if one exists.)

CombiMatrix’s arrays are being used today in various testing programs in different regions of the world to track Eurasian avian influenza H5N1, or bird flu. These tests are utilizing version 2.0 of the Influenza A Array. Subsequent programs will utilize version 3.0 and other updated versions that CombiMatrix will make available as new sequence and mutation information becomes public.

As before, the new Influenza A Microarray can identify all strains of Influenza A, including bird and human varieties. By tracking changes in genetic makeup of the virus, this array can differentiate highly pathogenic from less-lethal flu strains and can identify strains that may be resistant to drug therapy.

“Again we demonstrate the strength of our technology in taking the most up-to-date genetic information and incorporating it into an array that can be used for research and diagnostics,” said Dr. Amit Kumar, President and CEO of CombiMatrix. “We applaud the CDC in its effort to make this information public, and we support its efforts as well as that of the WHO in encouraging other labs around the world to do the same.”

ABOUT ACACIA RESEARCH CORPORATION

Acacia Research Corporation comprises two operating groups, Acacia Technologies group and CombiMatrix group.

The CombiMatrix group is developing a platform technology to rapidly produce CUSTOMARRAYS(TM), which are semiconductor-based tools for use in identifying and determining the roles of genes, gene mutations and proteins. The CombiMatrix’s group’s technology has a wide range of potential applications in the areas of genomics, proteomics, biosensors, drug discovery, drug development, diagnostics, combinatorial chemistry, material sciences and nanotechnology.

The Acacia Technologies group develops, acquires, and licenses patented technologies. Acacia controls 46 patent portfolios covering technologies used in a wide variety of industries including audio/video enhancement & synchronization, broadcast data retrieval, computer memory cache coherency, credit card fraud protection, database management, data encryption & product activation, digital media transmission (DMT(R)), digital video production, dynamic manufacturing modeling, enhanced Internet navigation, hearing aid ECS, image resolution enhancement, interactive data sharing, interactive television, laptop docking station connectivity, microprocessor enhancement, multi-dimensional bar codes, network data storage, resource scheduling, rotational video imaging, spreadsheet automation, user activated Internet advertising and web conferencing & collaboration software.

Acacia Research-Acacia Technologies (Nasdaq:ACTG) and Acacia Research-CombiMatrix (Nasdaq:CBMX) are both classes of common stock issued by Acacia Research Corporation and are intended to reflect the performance of the respective operating groups and are not issued by the operating groups.

Information about the Acacia Technologies group and the CombiMatrix group is available at www.acaciaresearch.com.

Safe Harbor Statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995:

This news release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the “safe harbor” provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based upon our current expectations and speak only as of the date hereof. Our actual results may differ materially and adversely from those expressed in any forward-looking statements as a result of various factors and uncertainties, including the economic slowdown affecting technology companies, our ability to successfully develop products, rapid technological change in our markets, changes in demand for our future products, legislative, regulatory and competitive developments and general economic conditions. Our Annual Report on Form 10-K, recent and forthcoming Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, recent Current Reports on Forms 8-K and 8-K/A, and other SEC filings discuss some of the important risk factors that may affect our business, results of operations and financial condition. We undertake no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward-looking statements for any reason.

Labcyte Awarded 27th U. S. Patent Describing Acoustic Transfer for the Preparation of Protein Microarrays

Labcyte Inc. has announced the issuance of U.S. Patent 7,090,333 describing the use of acoustic droplet ejection (ADE) for the preparation of microarrays of proteins and peptides.

ADE uses sound to move fluids eliminating all physical contact with the liquid being transferred.

This disposes of the need for pin tools, pipettes and nozzles that are currently used to make protein arrays and are known to cause loss of protein due to adsorption on the device surfaces.

ADE is also precise with the coefficient of variation, the measure of precision, often a few percent even at the nanoliter and picoliter level. ADE can even transfer volumes as low as 25 femtoliters (0.000025 nanoliters).

“This broad patent expands the horizons for protein array preparation,” said Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Elaine J. Heron.

“While the challenges of producing DNA arrays have largely been addressed, protein arrays present new problems that have not been adequately solved.”

“ADE solves these problems by eliminating the possibility of adsorption on the transfer device, which leads to variation in the amount of protein as well as cross contamination.”

“Our next step in the array area is to work with customers who wish to make highly reproducible protein or peptide arrays for their own use or for sale.”

“The Labcyte ADE technology is used in our award-winning Echoâ„¢ Series 500 liquid handlers.”

“These systems have quickly become the state-of-the-art in sample transfer in high-throughput screening laboratories in the pharmaceutical industry.”

“The elimination of pipette tips and pin tools with their large incremental costs in operation was an early driving force for their adoption.”

“But the improved results in precision and in assay results have had an even bigger impact upon users of the systems.”

“ADE transfers compounds directly from source microplates to assay plates or to microscopes slides for arrays by quickly moving a transducer from underneath one well to the next.”

“The focused sound energy generates a droplet from the source fluid for transfer at each well, and there is no need to clean the sound generator as it does not touch the source fluid.”

“This method of transfer eliminates the loss of compounds by adsorption to pin tools and pipettes.”

“Pharmaceutical researchers have proved that these losses lead to missing hits in screening.”

“We feel that the elimination of pin tools and pipettes in protein array preparation will have a similar impact on results.”

Further Information: http://www.labcyte.com

Snail Toxin May Spur New Meds Against Brain Disease

Newswise — University of Utah researchers isolated an unusual nerve toxin in an ocean-dwelling snail, and say its ability to glom onto the brain’s nicotine receptors may be useful for designing new drugs to treat a variety of psychiatric and brain diseases.

“We discovered a new toxin from a venomous cone snail that may enable scientists to more effectively develop medications for a wide range of nervous system disorders including Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, depression, nicotine addiction and perhaps even schizophrenia,” says J. Michael McIntosh.

Discovery of the new cone snail toxin will be published Friday, Aug. 25 in The Journal of Biological Chemistry by a team led by McIntosh, a University of Utah research professor of biology, professor and research director of psychiatry, member of the Center for Peptide Neuropharmacology and member of The Brain Institute.

McIntosh is the same University of Utah researcher who – as an incoming freshman student in 1979 – discovered another “conotoxin” that was developed into Prialt, a drug injected into fluid surrounding the spinal cord to treat severe pain due to cancer, AIDS, injury, failed back surgery and certain nervous system disorders. Prialt was approved in late 2004 in the United States and was introduced in Europe last month.

Prialt, sold by Ireland’s Elan Pharmaceuticals, took roughly 25 years to reach market after its discovery in venom from the fish-eating cone snail Conus magus or magician’s cone. McIntosh says he expects it will take 10 to 20 years to develop new medications based on what is learned from the new toxin – named alpha conotoxin OmIA (oh-em-one-ay) – isolated from a cone snail species named Conus omaria, which lives in the Pacific and Indian oceans and eats other snails. It ranges from 13⁄4 to 31⁄2 inches long.

McIntosh discovered and analyzed the new toxin with help from University of Utah cone snail research pioneer Baldomero “Toto” Olivera, who is a distinguished professor of biology, and lab technicians Sean B. Christensen and Cheryl Dowell.

Other coauthors of the study are Palmer Taylor, professor and dean of pharmacology at the University of California, San Diego, and his associates – Todd Talley, Igor Tsigelny and Kwok-Yiu Ho – as well as Kyou-Hoon Han at the Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology.

Diseases that Might Benefit from the New Snail Toxin

McIntosh says the OmIA toxin will be useful in designing new medicines because it fits like a key into certain lock-like “nicotinic acetylcholine receptors” found on nerve cells in the brain and the rest of the nervous system.

“Those are the same types of receptors you activate if you smoke a cigarette,” he says, explaining that nicotine in cigarette smoke “binds” to the receptor to trigger the release of a neurotransmitter, which is a chemical that carries a nerve impulse from one nerve cell to another, allowing nerve cells to communicate.

”Nicotine acts on those receptors in our brain, but they are in our brain for better reasons than to enjoy a cigarette,” McIntosh says. Different forms or subtypes of nicotinic receptors control the release of different neurotransmitters. “That’s important because if you had compounds to facilitate the release of one neurotransmitter and not another neurotransmitter, that opens up medicinal potential,” he says.

“For instance, one receptor modifies the release of dopamine. There are inadequate amounts of dopamine in Parkinson’s disease,” so a medicine designed to fit into a certain subtype of nicotinic receptor would produce more dopamine and thus protect against the development of tremors and other Parkinson’s symptoms. Indeed, other studies have found that smoking seems to forestall Parkinson’s disease.

A medicine that could block certain nicotinic receptors could be used to help people stop smoking cigarettes, and the same method might work for alcoholism because nicotinic receptors may be involved in alcohol addiction, McIntosh says.

Other nicotinic receptors trigger the release of neurotransmitters involved in memory, so activating the right receptors might lessen Alzheimer’s memory loss.

“One reason people smoke is they feel their thinking may be a little better, with increased attention and focus,” McIntosh says, noting that pharmaceutical companies “would like to mimic that positive benefit without all the downsides of cigarette smoke.”

Other nicotinic receptors influence “the release of serotonin and norepinephrine, two neurotransmitters strongly implicated in mood disorders” such as depression, so a drug to activate those receptors might treat depression, he adds.

Schizophrenics tend to smoke heavily because something in cigarette smoke “seems to help them filter out irrelevant stimuli. They can focus better,” McIntosh says. So a drug aimed at certain nicotinic receptors might treat schizophrenia.

New Neurotoxin is a Key for Designing New Medicines

McIntosh says the new toxin itself is unlikely to become a drug because it blocks rather than stimulates nicotinic receptors. But because it can act on some types of nicotinic receptors and not others – like a key that opens some locks but not others – it has great potential as a tool for precisely identifying the shape and structure of the receptor “locks,” thus making it easier to design new medicines or “keys” to fit those receptors and trigger them to release desired neurotransmitters.

In the new study, about 70 compounds from numerous cone snail species were screened in collaboration with Taylor’s lab at the University of California, San Diego.

Taylor uses “acetylcholine binding protein” as a model for nicotinic receptors. In other words, cone snail toxin “keys” that fit into nicotinic receptor “locks” also fit into highly similar “locks” made of this binding protein. So the binding protein was used as a way to find toxins that also would fit into nicotinic receptors. The new OmIA toxin was most interesting because it tightly fits some nicotinic receptors but not others. A drug that tightly fits desired receptors but not others is less likely to have undesirable side effects.

Unlike nicotinic receptors, the binding protein can be grown in crystal form, allowing Taylor’s team to use X-ray crystallography to make detailed microscopic pictures of how the toxin fit into the binding protein. Meanwhile, Han in South Korea used nuclear magnetic resonance to make pictures showing the structure of the new toxin.

Together, the images provide a highly detailed picture of how the cone snail toxin fits into the binding protein, and thus how it also would fit into a nicotinic receptor.

“By putting the two together, you can get a high-resolution picture of the binding site,” says McIntosh. “That allows for rational drug development. It allows you to design compounds that will bind to the same [nicotinic receptor] site, and it allows you to begin to understand how to bind to one receptor subtype and not another” to trigger the release of whatever neurotransmitter is needed to treat or prevent a particular disease.

“It is the picture of the binding site and the ability to distinguish one type of nicotinic receptor from another that makes the toxin so valuable,” he adds.

How the Study was Performed

The snails from which the new toxin was obtained were collected by divers in Olivera’s native Philippines. Venomous snails use a dart-like tooth to zap fish, snails and other prey, injecting them with an immobilizing toxin. Venom from the collected snails was extracted at a lab in the Philippines, and then sent to Utah.

Once the screening process identified OmIA as promising, McIntosh and colleagues purified the toxin – one of perhaps 200 components in Conus omaria venom. They determined its chemical structure and then synthesized more of the toxin, since they had only a small amount of the natural version.

Next, the synthetic toxin was tested to see how well it acted as a “key” to fit into the “locks” represented both by binding proteins (from freshwater snails and a sea slug) and by actual nicotinic receptors, which came from rat cells but were grown in frog eggs. That allowed the researcher to grow various subtypes of the nicotinic receptors and see how well the toxin fit them.

Taylor and Han provided pictures of the physical structures of the binding protein “locks” and toxin “key,” and then “used computer simulation to dock the two structures together,” says McIntosh. “That generates a picture of the binding site – the points of contact between the toxin and the binding protein.”

The site is the place a new drug would be designed to fit.

“The whole idea is to make the model of the nicotinic receptor so predictive that you can then really speed up the development of drugs,” McIntosh says. “If you have an accurate model of the receptor, you can plug in a model of your drugs and do a lot of ‘virtual screening.’ Rather than synthesizing a million compounds and having all but one be duds, you can synthesize a few thousand compounds based on the model and come up with a better drug with less time and resources.”

The Center for Peptide Neuropharmacology studies neurotransmitters and receptors that enable rapid information transfer in the brain. The Brain Institute includes more than 100 University of Utah scientists unlocking mysteries of the human brain via interdisciplinary collaboration. The institute supports scientists in turning research advances into technologies and treatments for brain disorders. See http://brain.utah.edu

MerLion Pharmaceuticals Pte Ltd Announces The Completion Of Merger With Combinature Biopharm AG And Athelas SA; Closure Of US $30 Million Financing Round

MerLion Pharmaceuticals Pte Ltd (MerLion) of Singapore, the world’s leading natural products based drug discovery company, announces that it has completed a merger by exchange of shares with Combinature Biopharm AG (Berlin, Germany) and Athelas SA (Geneva, Switzerland).

SINGAPORE, Singapore | Aug 21, 2006 |
MerLion Pharmaceuticals Pte Ltd (MerLion) of Singapore, the world’s leading natural products based drug discovery company,

announces that it has completed a merger by exchange of shares with Combinature Biopharm AG (Berlin, Germany) and Athelas SA (Geneva, Switzerland). Both European companies become 100% subsidiaries of MerLion whose headquarters and drug discovery research centre is based in Singapore. Drug development of its anti-infective programmes and nuclear magnetic resonance screening activities will be conducted from Berlin.

Dr Tony Buss, CEO of MerLion said “This major expansion of our capabilities, combined with proven drug discovery technologies and promising clinical candidates, position MerLion for its next exciting phase of growth. The company will continue its lead discovery activities in a range of therapeutic areas and will focus on the clinical development of anti-infective drugs.”

Dr Harald Labischinski, CEO of Combinature Biopharm and the new Chief Scientific Officer of MerLion, said “Combinature is very pleased to enter into such a strategic agreement with the leading natural compound research company and is now for the first time in the position to forward the new company’s most advanced antibiotic compounds from late stage pre-clinical development through phase I and phase II clinical. We expect to start our first clinical programmes with a novel mode of action resistance breaker antibiotic as well as with a new subclass of a broad spectrum antibiotic class within a few months from now.”

Dr Christine Deuschel, CEO of Athelas, said “MerLion offers Athelas an exceptional opportunity to progress the development of our novel anti-pathogenicity platform. The integration of Athelas’ DiVi Technology will provide MerLion with a broad and completely novel way of discovering new molecules based on a mechanism of action unexploited to date”.

The company has also completed the first closure of US$ 25M from a US$30M round of financing, which will be completed in full during the fourth quarter of 2006. This funding will propel the company towards an initial public offering within two years. The round, led by Aravis Venture of Switzerland and Bio*One Capital Pte Ltd of Singapore, represents one of the largest private rounds of funding raised for a drug discovery and development company in the region.

Ms. Swee Yeok Chu, CEO of Bio*One Capital and Mr. Jean-Philippe Tripet, Managing Partner of Aravis stated: “We believe that this cross border merger and financing is a landmark deal in Asia that confirms the ability of biotechnology companies to successfully develop from Singapore, capitalising on international alliances, funding from international investors, as well as strong local infrastructure that supports the growth of the company. With this financing and acquisitions, MerLion has now built a profile that compares with the best emerging biotechnology companies globally.”

Other participants in this round of funding include Nomura Research and Advisory, Aurelia Private Equity, Brandenburg Capital, Bioveda Capital, Novartis Venture Fund Mitsubishi Corporation and 3i Group Investment LP.

Michael Toenes of BC Venture GmbH , Juergen Leschke, Management Partner Aurelia Private Equity, Dr. Clemens Doppler of 3i Group Investment LP and Dr Dirk Honold, former CFO of Combinature stated: “The new company is now in the exciting position to further fill and advance the pipeline and to start clinical testing with very promising antibiotic drugs which have already shown exciting profiles. By the transaction the combined entity will have a strategic position to enter into the highly attractive and growing markets in the important area of novel anti-infectives.” In addition to progressing at least two anti-infective candidates into clinical proof of concept studies and developing the growing portfolio of earlier candidates towards the clinic, MerLion will retain its strong partnership alliances in natural products drug discovery and will expand in two main areas;

Novel Anti-Infectives Discovery The acquisition of the anti-infectives DiVi discovery platform of Athelas, which received an award at the 2005 Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC), provides MerLion with strong target generation capabilities and proprietary drug discovery screening systems in the area of bacterial pathogenicity.

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Screening The experienced NMR screening group based in Berlin will continue to utilise their expertise and technology with existing partners and in support of ongoing MerLion portfolio projects. This technology is the subject of increasing interest to the industry and is capable of advancing discovery by closely identifying how active compounds interact with drug targets and how these interactions may be optimised. MerLion would like to recognise the professional services provided during this complex transaction by Jones Day, CMS, Wong Partnership, Schellenburg-Wittmer, Vischer, PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Ernst & Young and Maidavale Consulting.

For more information, please visit http://www.merlionpharma.com Contact Chris Molloy, MerLion Pharmaceuticals Pte Ltd, The Capricorn #05-01, Singapore Science Park II, Singapore 117528 Tel: +65 6829 5606 Fax: +65 6829 5601 enquiries@merlionpharma.com

SOURCE: MerLion Pharmaceuticals Pte Ltd


Euroscreen Awarded U.S. Patent on Human Nociceptin (ORL1) Receptor

Euroscreen SA today announced that it has been issued an U.S. patent that covers the use of an important human neurology drug target. The receptor, a G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) known as the human nociceptin (ORL1) receptor, is implicated in the control of some key neurological processes, such as pain perception, analgesia, and anxiety. Euroscreen’s patent protects any screening process using this receptor in order to find compounds that modulate its activity, and thus may have pharmaceutical potential.

Brussels, Belgium (PRWEB) August 10, 2006 — Euroscreen SA today announced that it has been issued an U.S. patent that covers the use of an important human neurology drug target. The receptor, a G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) known as the human nociceptin (ORL1) receptor, is implicated in the control of some key neurological processes, such as pain perception, analgesia, and anxiety. Euroscreen’s patent protects any screening process using this receptor in order to find compounds that modulate its activity, and thus may have pharmaceutical potential.

The natural molecule in the body that binds to the human nociceptin receptor (also know as Opioid Receptor-Like-1 receptor, or ORL1) is a small protein called Nociceptin (or Orphanin FQ). Nociceptin has been implicated in many central nervous system processes, in addition to those mentioned above, including control of the cardiovascular system, food intake, airway function, learning, memory and locomotion.

Commenting on the announcement, Dr. Jean Combalbert, President and CEO of Euroscreen, said: “This new U.S. patent represents a significant addition to our growing portfolio of validated disease-related receptors. It will enable Euroscreen to partner with companies wishing to use the human nociceptin receptor in their search for innovative drugs, through license agreements.”

The U.S. patent (7,083,932) relates in particular to screening methods to single out compounds that modulate, either up or down, the biological activity of the human nociceptin receptor. Any screening methods using either membrane preparation or cell line expressing nociceptin receptor are covered by valid claims.

Euroscreen has already obtained a similar European patent and is awaiting the issuance of equivalent patent applications in Japan and Canada, whose pending claims relate to similar subject matter.

For further information, please contact:
Euroscreen s.a. Tel: +32 71 348 500
Al Gray, Ph.D. VP Business Development
Vincent Lannoy, Ph.D. Business Development and Licensing Manager

About Euroscreen s.a. – www.euroscreen.com
Euroscreen is a preclinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focusing on the discovery, development and partnering of small molecule drugs for unmet medical needs. Euroscreen is developing a pipeline of compounds targeting G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) using over 11 years of experience in research and commercialization of this critical class of drug targets in association with the Institute of Interdisciplinary Research (IRIBHM) of the University of Brussels. Euroscreen’s AequoScreen(tm) cellular assay platform is used extensively in its screening of GPCRs for candidate drugs which are partnered during preclinical development.

The Company has developed a broad GPCR patent portfolio for licensing to biopharmaceutical companies. Such patents address targets such as CCR5, Chemerin receptor, GPR43, GPR7/8, FPRL2, purinergic receptors (P2Y4, P2Y11 and P2Y13) and SHIP2 for type II diabetes. Euroscreen is able to offer intellectual property rights to companies for the development of therapeutic drugs that act through the above-mentioned targets. For more information regarding the Euroscreen’s portfolio and the associated licensing terms, please contact Dr. Vincent Lannoy.

Euroscreen pursues a dual platform strategy of combining its drug discovery business with its products and services business unit which serves biopharmaceutical companies around the world. Euroscreen focuses on internal targets in the inflammation area as well as several partnered preclinical-stage collaborations with biopharmaceutical partners. The company has research, product distribution and licensing partnerships with Alchemia, Amersham/GE Healthcare, Cephalon, ChemDiv, Evotec, ICOS, Medarex, Merck & Co, Novartis, Pfizer Inc, and Solvay. Euroscreen is a privately held company based in Brussels, Belgium.

CHDI Selects Evotec as Strategic Drug Discovery Partner in the Search for Huntington Disease Treatments

Evotec AG (Frankfurt Stock Exchange: EVT, TecDAX 30) today announced that CHDI, Inc., a not-for profit organisation pursuing a biotech approach to finding therapies for Huntington Disease, has chosen Evotec as a strategic partner for helping them advance its drug discovery programmes.

Since March 2006, Evotec and CHDI have signed four agreements covering medicinal chemistry, assay development and medium-throughput screening (MTS), ultra-high-throughput screening (uHTS) and library synthesis and management services. These contracts cover most of Evotec’s integrated discovery offering. With access to these resources, CHDI has all the tools in place to rapidly discover novel drugs against Huntington Disease targets and further optimise them to the point of clinical development. Both parties envisage expanding the agreements to accommodate further discovery capabilities of Evotec as and when required.

In the course of this collaboration Evotec will apply its biological science expertise to develop assays, including those designed for high content screening, against high priority biological targets thought to be of importance to treating Huntington Disease provided by CHDI and the High Q Foundation. Working with medicinal chemists at CHDI, Evotec will apply its own medicinal chemistry and parallel synthesis skills to synthesise libraries of novel small molecule compounds. Evotec will also use its proprietary platform to screen these compounds and Evotec’s own library to identify compounds with biological activity. Using Evotec’s medicinal chemistry, profiling and ADMET (Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, Excretion and Toxicity) expertise active compounds will be further characterised, improving their potency and selectivity to generate lead molecules for further progression into clinical trials.

“As collaborative enablers, CHDI depends on a network of academic and industrial partners to conduct its research efforts. Evotec has an impressive and integrated suite of core competencies that will be critical for our efforts. Looking at Evotec’s breadth of skills and expertise in drug discovery coupled with their profound knowledge of CNS diseases we believe we have found the ideal partner in our search for novel treatments that may slow or prevent Huntington Disease,” commented Dr. Robert Pacifici, Chief Scientific Adviser to CHDI.

“We are delighted that CHDI, a prestigious organisation dedicated to Huntington Disease research, has chosen us as their partner for drug discovery. With our integrated offering in this field and our CNS expertise we are ideally positioned to add significant value to their programmes up to clinical development and beyond,” said Dr Mark Ashton, Executive Vice President Business Development Services at Evotec.

Notes to the Editor

About Huntington Disease (HD)
HD is a familial disease, passed from parent to child through a mutation in a gene. Each child of an HD parent has a 50-50 chance of inheriting the HD gene which causes programmed degeneration of brain cells and results in emotional disturbance, loss of intellectual faculties and uncontrolled movements. Most people with HD develop the symptoms at midlife but in some people onset occurs in infancy or old age. The average survival time after onset is approximately fifteen to twenty years. It is estimated that about one in every 10,000 persons has the HD gene. At this time, there is no way to stop or reverse the course of HD.

About Evotec AG
Evotec is a leader in the discovery and development of novel small molecule drugs. Both through its own discovery programmes and through contract research partnerships, the Company is generating the highest quality research results to its partners in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries.

In proprietary projects, Evotec specialises in finding new treatments for diseases of the Central Nervous System. Evotec has three programmes in clinical development: EVT 201, a partial positive allosteric modulator (pPAM) of the GABAA receptor complex for the treatment of insomnia, EVT 101, a subtype selective NMDA receptor antagonist for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease and/or neuropathic pain and EVT 301, a selective and reversible inhibitor of MAO-B for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.
In contract research, Evotec has established itself as the partner of choice for pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies worldwide. The Company provides innovative and often integrated solutions from drug target to clinic through an unmatched range of capabilities, including early stage assay development and screening through to medicinal chemistry and drug manufacturing.

In 2005, Evotec has generated sales of EUR 80 million with 600 employees located in Hamburg, Germany and near Oxford and in Glasgow, UK.
www.evotec.com

About CHDI, Inc. and High Q Foundation, Inc.
CHDI, Inc. and the High Q Foundation, Inc. (High Q) are non-profit organizations that share the mission of bringing together academia, industry, governmental agencies, and other funding organizations in the search for HD treatments.
CHDI is pursuing a biotech approach to rapidly discover and develop drugs that prevent or slow HD. Through collaborations with industrial and academic partners, CHDI, participates in all aspects of drug discovery and development from high throughput screening to preclinical development. For more information about CHDI and its collaborative programs please see www.chdi-inc.org or contact Robert Pacifici ( robert.pacifici@chdi-inc.org).

High Q supports HD research aimed at target identification and validation, the development and use of animal models, drug delivery, and the search for markers of disease progression. For more information about High Q and its support of HD research please see www.highqfoundation.org or contact Ethan Signer ( ethan.signer@highqfoundation.org) or Allan Tobin ( allan.tobin@highqfoundation.org).

SOURCE: Evotec AG

Improved In Vitro Genotoxicity Testing to Reduce Animal Testing

n conjunction with the University of Manchester, Gentronix has been granted a research award of £133,024 by the National Centre for the Replacement, Refinement and Reduction of Animals in Research (NC3Rs).

One of nine awards made by NC3Rs in 2006, the funding will be used to develop a novel genotoxicity assay in a human liver cell line, designed to reduce the use of live animals in drug development.

Safety testing of new pharmaceuticals includes screening for the potential to cause cancer. The existing mammalian cell in vitro tests are highly sensitive so most carcinogens are identified, but many safe compounds are also falsely identified as potential carcinogens.

Because this can lead to needless loss of useful new drugs, live animal tests are still conducted when there is only one in vitro positive result. By using a new high specificity human cell-based genotoxicity test, the aim will be to reduce the number of compounds tested on animals.

Preliminary validation studies with a new human cell genotoxicity test have demonstrated an ability to detect all direct acting mechanistic classes of genotoxic chemicals, as well as aneugens and compounds disrupting DNA replication and repair.

Results recently reported by Gentronix and GSK in Mutation Research show the new assay to have sensitivity comparable to that of existing mammalian in vitro genotoxic assays, but uniquely combined with very high levels of specificity.

However, some compounds (promutagens) are only carcinogenic after passing through the liver, and regulations require a separate test to be performed using liver tissue extracts.

The NC3Rs research award will enable the development of the new test in a liver cell line to give a better early indication of genotoxicity while reducing animal testing. These results will be compared with those of the existing tests using liver extracts.

As well as providing a valuable new tool to confirm positive data from existing tests, the new high specificity human cell-based genotoxicity test aims to reduce the number of compounds going on to animal testing.

The use of this new test will not only reduce the number of animals used in genotoxicity testing but also reduce the considerable costs of conducting animal tests.

Further Information: http://www.gentronix.co.uk

BrainCells In-Licenses Clinical-Stage CNS Compound From Mitsubishi Pharma

SAN DIEGO, Aug. 10 /PRNewswire/ — BrainCells Inc. (BCI) today announced it has in-licensed a clinical-stage compound from Mitsubishi Pharma Corp. (MPC) that BCI will reposition and develop for the treatment of central nervous system (CNS) diseases, including mood disorders.

MPC extensively developed the compound for another CNS indication, then suspended the program when the drug met safety expectations but did not reach the defined efficacy endpoints. BCI applied its proprietary technology in the area of neurogenesis — the process by which endogenous stem cells in the adult human brain produce new brain tissue, including neurons — to identify different indications for the drug. The company expects to begin development and initiate additional Phase 2 clinical trials of the compound, BCI-540, next year.

“This is indicative of the extensive opportunity that exists for us in the CNS drug development space,” said James A. Schoeneck, BCI’s CEO. “We can screen compounds efficiently for neurogenic properties and pursue the development of these compounds for indications that weren’t part of a licensor’s original plans. The license from MPC provides us with the ability to capitalize on the predictive power of our screening platform, enabling us to develop a novel product for CNS disorders that affect millions of patients.”

“BCI has a unique approach to the identification and development of drugs that can be repositioned for a variety of CNS diseases,” said Akihiro Tobe, managing executive officer of MPC. “We believe that BCI has the right mix of cutting-edge science and development expertise to maximize the opportunity for the compound.”

About Mitsubishi Pharma Corp.

Mitsubishi Pharma Corporation (MPC), a research-driven pharmaceutical company, is the core member in the Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings group, under which Mitsubishi Chemical, a leading chemical company in Japan, and MPC exist as wholly-owned subsidiaries. Formed in 2001 by the merger of Mitsubishi-Tokyo Pharmaceuticals & Welfide Corporation (formerly Yoshitomi), MPC is committed to scientific progress, pharmaceutical advancement and the creation of products that benefit worldwide people’s welfare. Its core therapeutic areas are psychiatric and central nervous system diseases, cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, immunological and respiratory diseases and hepatic diseases. More information about the company can be found by visiting http://www.m-pharma.co.jp/.

About BrainCells Inc.

BrainCells Inc. (BCI) is a San Diego-based drug discovery and development company that is applying proprietary neurogenesis-based technology to identify and reposition compounds for the treatment of central nervous system (CNS) diseases. With its predictive screening platform, BCI can direct the selection and development of neurogenic compounds, increasing the opportunity for successful clinical trials in a variety of CNS indications. For more information, visit http://www.braincellsinc.com.

Chinese chemists synthesize compounds for BASF’s crop protection discovery research

10 Aug 2006 : Cooperation with partners throughout the world is an important aspect of the research strategy of BASF. The company spends nearly €100 million a year on a current total of 1,300 cooperations. One of them, a cooperative arrangement that has been in place for more than a year with Chinese company WuXi Pharmatech in Shanghai, has proven so fruitful that the number of chemists working there for BASF has now been increased to more than 20. The Agricultural Products division of BASF engages its Chinese partner to synthesize chemical compounds that are needed in the wide-ranging search for new active ingredients. The subsequent modification of the new substances and their screening for biological effectiveness are then conducted in the central research units at Ludwigshafen and Limburgerhof.

”Purchasing new substances for primary screening and building blocks for synthesis from external partners on the one hand and focusing our internal efforts on developing promising compounds for crop protection active ingredients on the other hand is successful and has stood the test of time,“ says Dr. Peter Eckes, Senior Vice President Agricultural Products Research and Development. “We work with 10 external partners – some of them for several years already – who synthesize new compounds for us.“ Global crop-protection research is the first unit of BASF to work together with a Chinese company in an extensive synthesis cooperation.

The development of innovative products and processes – including new crop protection active ingredients – is indispensable for the profitable growth of BASF. Before identifying an agent that promises to be successful, many thousands of chemical compounds must be run through the numerous optimization cycles each year in the Agricultural Products division. If a new class of substances shows an interesting effect against harmful fungi, insects or weeds, its chemical structure is systematically modified. Then it is run once again through the cycle of chemical synthesis, screening and evaluation of results. An optimized lead structure emerges at the end of this process.

“Cooperation with external partners makes a valuable contribution to the efficient organization of our research processes,“ said Dr. Alfred Hackenberger, President Specialty Chemicals Research. “We enhance flexibility and can thus achieve even more with our research budget, for example by screening more substances in a shorter period of time. That is an important success factor because only a few of those substances turn out to be successful crop-protection active ingredients.”

All external partners are extensively assessed to make sure that no know-how leaks out and that no potentially new active ingredients are jeopardized. Success factors in cooperation are unconditional reliability and open communication. In addition, product quality and synthetic competence are evaluated because BASF must be able to depend on its partners to do as much as it itself would when trying to solve tricky problems.