Translate Bio Announces Departure of Chief Financial Officer

LEXINGTON, Mass., Dec. 22, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Translate Bio (Nasdaq: TBIO), a clinical-stage messenger RNA (mRNA) therapeutics company developing a new class of potentially transformative medicines to treat or prevent debilitating or life-threatening diseases, announced today that John Schroer, the Company’s Chief Financial Officer (CFO), is departing the Company for personal reasons. Mr. Schroer's departure will be effective by year-end 2020. Robert Prentiss, Translate Bio’s Vice President and Corporate Controller since 2017, will serve as Principal Accounting Officer and report directly to the Company’s Chief Executive Officer, Ronald Renaud, on an interim basis while a formal search process to appoint a new CFO is conducted.

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Translate Bio Announces Departure of Chief Financial Officer

Zenith Announces Voting Results from the 2020 Annual and Special Meeting of Shareholders

CALGARY, Alberta, Dec. 22, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Zenith Capital Corp. ("Zenith" or the "Company") announces that, at its annual and special meeting of shareholders held earlier today, Zenith shareholders approved all resolutions outlined in the Notice of Meeting and Management Information Circular dated November 9, 2020 (the Information Circular), which is available on SEDAR at www.sedar.com, and on the Zenith website at www.zenithepigenetics.com.

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Zenith Announces Voting Results from the 2020 Annual and Special Meeting of Shareholders

Resverlogix Announces Voting Results from the 2020 Meeting of Shareholders and Update on $13 Million Investment by Sheikh Abdulgader Aboud Baeshen

CALGARY, Alberta, Dec. 22, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Resverlogix Corp. (“Resverlogix”, or the "Corporation") (TSX:RVX) today held its Annual and Special Meeting of Shareholders (the “Meeting”) in Calgary, Alberta.

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Resverlogix Announces Voting Results from the 2020 Meeting of Shareholders and Update on $13 Million Investment by Sheikh Abdulgader Aboud Baeshen

Harvard Bioscience Announces New Credit Facility

HOLLISTON, Mass., Dec. 22, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Harvard Bioscience, Inc. (Nasdaq: HBIO) (“Harvard Bioscience”) today announced the refinancing of its debt with the closing of a new $65 million credit facility (the “Refinancing”). Proceeds from the new facility will be used to retire existing debt and pay related fees and expenses. The Refinancing significantly reduces borrowing costs while increasing operating flexibility through less restrictive financial covenants and access to higher levels of revolver borrowings.

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Harvard Bioscience Announces New Credit Facility

Supernus Announces Positive Results from Phase III Study for SPN-812 in Adults with ADHD

ROCKVILLE, Md., Dec. 22, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Supernus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: SUPN), a pharmaceutical company focused on developing and commercializing products for the treatment of central nervous system diseases, today announced positive topline results from a Phase III study of SPN-812 in adults (P306) for the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

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Supernus Announces Positive Results from Phase III Study for SPN-812 in Adults with ADHD

Sorrento Announces It Has Submitted An Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) Application to the FDA for COVI-STIX™ Rapid Test for the Detection of…

SAN DIEGO, Dec. 22, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: SRNE, "Sorrento") today announced that an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) Application has been submitted to the US Food and Drug Administration for its COVI-STIX rapid diagnostic test for the detection of the SARS-CoV-2 virus nucleocapsid antigen in nasal samples of patients.

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Sorrento Announces It Has Submitted An Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) Application to the FDA for COVI-STIX™ Rapid Test for the Detection of...

Lui Franciosi of Franciosi Consulting Launches YouTube Channel

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Dec. 22, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Lui Franciosi is proud to announce the launch of his new YouTube channel. As a pharmacologist and former executive in the pharmaceutical industry, Dr. Franciosi’s videos will focus on topics related to health and pharma care, as well as topics related to entrepreneurship, seniors care and COVID-19.

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Lui Franciosi of Franciosi Consulting Launches YouTube Channel

Ocugen Inc. Announces Plan to Adjourn Annual Meeting of Stockholders, Modify Proposal Regarding Increase in Number of Authorized Shares

Annual Meeting to be adjourned solely with respect to Item 2, and Item 2 to be modified to decrease the proposed aggregate number of shares of common stock that the Company would be authorized to issue from 500,000,000 shares to 400,000,000 shares Annual Meeting to be adjourned solely with respect to Item 2, and Item 2 to be modified to decrease the proposed aggregate number of shares of common stock that the Company would be authorized to issue from 500,000,000 shares to 400,000,000 shares

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Ocugen Inc. Announces Plan to Adjourn Annual Meeting of Stockholders, Modify Proposal Regarding Increase in Number of Authorized Shares

Medicine by Design symposium highlights importance of convergence in regenerative medicine and human health – News@UofT

Researchersarepoised to makeunprecedentedbreakthroughsinhuman health thanks toadvancesin biomedical and computational sciencesthathave drivencritical tools and technologiessuch as genetic engineering,synthetic biology, andartificial intelligence.

Thats the messageDr. VictorDzau, president oftheU.S.National Academy ofMedicine, delivered to Medicine by Designs fifthannual symposium on Dec. 7 and 8.

Thevirtual event, whichattracted more than 500 registrants from across North America, focused on the theme of better science throughconvergence theintegration of approaches from engineering, science, medicine and other fields to expand knowledge and spark innovation.

I think for younger people, there is really not a more exciting time, in my opinion, to do research than now, because we can really see that some of the initial concepts that people have about health and medicinecan be realizedand truly transform the way we do health andmedicine.

In his talk, Dzau focused on the National Academy of MedicinesHealthy Longevity Global Challenge,an international competition that aims to catalyze transformative ideas and breakthroughs that will extend human healthand lifespan.

That program is one of the inspirations for Medicine by DesignsGrand Questions Program, which seeks to fund bold research that promises dramatically better health outcomes by changing the future of regenerative medicine.

Through our Grand Questions Program, we are thinking about what comes next and how to overcome fundamental problems in regenerative medicine,saidMichael Sefton, executive director of Medicine by Design andUniversity Professorin the department of chemical engineering and applied chemistry and theInstitute of Biomedical Engineeringat the University of Toronto.

We have a broad definition of regenerativemedicine, andpreventing degeneration can be as important as the next cell therapy.

Sefton pointed out that the symposium theme of better science through convergencefocusedon a key aspect of Medicine by Design:That we combine campus and hospital investigators, transformative science and translational elements, junior and senior investigators, and local and international collaborators, to address fundamental problems in regenerative medicine.

Thesymposium also featured a talk byRobert Langer, David H. KochInstitute Professorin the department of chemical engineeringat the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The most highly cited engineer in history, he spoke about lessons helearnedfromhisscientific and business successes and how he decidedto be his own champion after facing criticism for his novel ideas early in his career.

If you try to do things whether its convergence, or things that a lot of people disagree with you have tohang in there, Langer said.Having good intellectual property has been key toraising the funds to do these things, and medicine is an incredibly expensive thing.

And finally, you really need teams that are super driven, and I think these startup companies have been a wonderful way to do this.

The symposium was organized around four sessions: translation, inflammation, biomaterials andimmunoengineering.Invited speakers from across North AmericaincludedKim Warren(AVROBIO),Kenneth Walsh(University of Virginia),Sarah Heilshorn(Stanford University)andMegan Levings(University of British Columbia).

All speakers fromU of T and its partnerhospitals were lead investigators on Medicine by Designs multi-disciplinary, multi-institution team projects. They included:John Dick,Clinton RobbinsandShaf Keshavjee(University Health Network (UHN));Molly Shoichet(department of chemical engineering and applied chemistry and Institute of Biomedical Engineering);Juan CarlosZiga-Pflcker(Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre);andAndras Nagy(Sinai Health System).

Ted Sargent, vice-president of research and innovation, and strategic initiatives,and a University Professor in the Edward S. Rogers Sr. department of electrical and computer engineering,opened the symposium by congratulatingMedicine by Design on its successful mid-term review, which was conducted in early 2020 by a panel of international experts and theCanada First Research Excellence Fund(CFREF), which funds Medicine by Design.

Medicine by Design has amplified existing areas ofexcellenceatU of Tandour partner hospitals (Toronto Academic Health Sciences Network),and pushed the boundaries of regenerative medicine to tackle cell-based therapies, strategies for endogenous repair and the use of a stem cell lens to target the triggers of disease,Sargent said. In fact, Medicine by Design is such a compelling collaborative, cross-disciplinary initiative that itis a template fora new class of initiatives at the University ofToronto theInstitutional Strategic Initiativesportfolio whosepurpose is to mobilize ambitious,groundbreaking, collaborative, multi-institutional research networks that tackleimportantresearch problems, buildmajorexternal partnershipsboth with industry and emerging companies as well as with global academic peers;and foster societal impact.

They support the pursuit of grand challenges and bold ideas across disciplinary boundaries,further elevate U of Ts profile in high priority research areas of strategic importance,and enable us to realize transformational impacts on issues of major societal import.

The symposium also offered an opportunity for almost 45trainees to present their research during a poster session.KerstinKaufmann, a post-doctoral fellow in the laboratory ofJohn Dick(Princess Margaret Cancer Centre,UHN), won first place.JonathanLabriola, apost-doctoral fellowinSachdev Sidhuslab(Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research, U of T), placed second, whileSabihaHacibekiroglu, a post-doctoral fellow in the lab ofAndras Nagy(Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, UHN)placed third.The awards were sponsored by STEMCELL Technologies.

YasamanAghazadeh,a post-doctoral fellow in the labsofCristina Nostro(McEwen Stem Cell Institute, UHN)andSara Nunes Vasconcelos(Toronto General Hospital Research Institute,UHN),won theCCRMTranslation Awardfor the poster with the greatest translational potential.AndAi Tian, a post-doctoral fellow fromJulien Muffatslab (The Hospital for Sick Children), won thePeoples Choice Award, a new award this year that wasdetermined byvotingby symposium attendeesand sponsored byBlueRockTherapeutics.

Funded by a $114-million grant from CFREF, Medicine by Design brings together more than 145principal investigators at the University of Toronto and its affiliated hospitals to work at the convergence of engineering,medicineand science. It builds on decades of made-in-Canada excellence in regenerative medicine dating back to the discovery of stem cells in the early 1960s by Toronto researchers James Till andErnest McCulloch.

Regenerative medicine uses stem cells to replace diseased tissues and organs, creating therapies in which cells are the biological product. Regenerative medicine can also mean triggering stem cells that are already present in the human body to repair damaged tissues or to modulate immune responses. Increasingly, regenerative medicine researchers are using a stem cell lens to identify critical interactions or defects that prepare the ground for disease, paving the way for new approaches to preventing disease before it starts.

(Photo of Robert Langer by Jason Alden)

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Medicine by Design symposium highlights importance of convergence in regenerative medicine and human health - News@UofT