Newsletter
Vol. 15, No. 1
February,
2007
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| Special thanks to Dr. Robert Parker who
provided photos from last year’s annual meeting. |
Elaine M. Faustman, Ph.D. University
of Washington
As we start this year let me say Happy
New Year and share with you some of the exciting opportunities that
we have as a Society for 2007. As some of you know one of the biggest
activities scheduled for this year is our third Strategic Planning
Session to be held in April. We have had strategic sessions every
five years and these have established some important new directions
that have guided the progress of our Society. One example of this
was the announcement at our 2006 meeting that we had reached our
goal for financial health of the Society. We hope that our 2007
session will permit us to assess how far we have come, where we
need to go next, how to better meet your needs as a member, and
how to improve the Society overall.
Council has identified three topics as
areas of focus for the 2007 session: 1) scientific excellence and
leadership, 2) membership recruitment and retention, and 3) outreach
and partnership by defining the role of the Teratology Society today
and relationship with other sectors/organizations to enhance our
science, education/training and understanding of our field. Council
expects that one outcome of the session is to define the Teratology
Society in terms of its internal and external (public) visibility
in the three areas and to have a plan to reach these objectives.
For this session to be successful, we need to know the ideas, concerns,
and aspirations that our members have for the Teratology Society.
All members are invited to have input
on these topics. In addition, each committee of the Teratology Society
will be asked to provide written input on these topics and be invited
to put forth the name of one member for consideration as a participant
in the planning session.
The final list of participants will be
selected by the chairs of the Organizing Committee, Drs. Christina
Chambers and Melissa Tassinari and endorsed by Council. The number
of participants will not exceed 25, which will include the members
of Council, the Editors of the journal, and the members selected
from nominations put forth by the committees and membership. If
you are interested in submitting comments on these topics and being
involved in these activities please let Christina (chchambers@ucsd.edu)
or Melissa (melissa.s.tassinari@pfizer.com)
know as soon as possible as we welcome your input. There will be
some pre-work required from the participants and the agenda is designed
to cover 2 to 2.5 days. The anticipated dates of the session are
April 18-20, 2007. The location has not yet been determined.
In this newsletter we also have exciting
descriptions of the Teratology Society Annual Meeting and updates
on our search for an Editor for Birth Defects Research Part
A. As you can see we have an important year ahead of us and
we welcome your comments, inputs and insights.
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|
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| Melissa Tassinari and Carole Kimmel at 2006
Past President’s Luncheon. |
|
2006 Robert L. Brent Lecturer, John Rogers,
speaks of Mice, Men and Monkeys; photo from last year’s
meeting. |
Thomas B. Knudsen, Ph.D. University
of Louisville
Becca Rhame, Teratology Society
The 2007 Annual Meeting Program Committee
has organized an outstanding and expansive scientific program. The
Committee worked with the Organization of Teratology Information
Specialists (OTIS), the Neurobehavioral Teratology Society (NBTS),
and the Behavioral Toxicology Society (BTS) to develop numerous
education courses, scientific symposia, and workshops as well as
platform talks and poster presentations. The session topics address
newer concepts in the field and are likely to generate lively interaction.
The Education Course will revisit principles
in teratology with a focus on basic concepts and research applications.
Topics include methods for detecting birth defects, regulatory study
design and interpretation, maternal-fetal considerations, animal-human
concordance, nutritional factors, and new information in understanding
mechanisms. Our Sunrise MiniCourse will address developmental and
reproductive toxicity testing of biopharmaceuticals—agents
used for therapeutic or in vivo diagnostic purposes that are produced
(engineered) by biotechnology. Separate registration is required
for both the Education Course and the Sunrise Mini-Course, so please
register early!
The general scientific program will begin
Sunday afternoon with a joint symposium on prenatal drug abuse and
adolescent developmental trajectories. More than 9.2 million children
live with at least one illicit-drug-using parent or other adult.
Mounting findings warn of the harmful links between parental drug
use and children’s developmental trajectories, and these effects
may be exacerbated by prenatal drug exposure. This symposium will
focus on the effects of prenatal drug exposure, the multiple factors
associated with parent drug use, and potential connections to subsequent
drug abuse vulnerability. A second joint TS/NBTS/OTIS symposium
will be held Monday on Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD).
This session will address a wide range of basic and clinical issues
associated with alcohol use during pregnancy. Prenatal alcohol damage
affects an estimated 1% of liveborn infants and is the leading preventable
cause of mental retardation. The complex etiology of FASD requires
basic research to improve mechanistic understanding of prenatal
alcohol damage and clinical research to identify at-risk newborns
at the earliest possible age.
The March of Dimes will sponsor a symposium
Tuesday on epigenetics and developmental programming of metabolic
disorders. Clinical and epidemiological studies have shown significant
correlations between the in utero and early life environments and
increased risk of hypertension, coronary heart disease, diabetes,
and obesity that are components of the metabolic syndrome. Understanding
what epigenetic marks critically scar the genome is a new area referred
to as “fetal or developmental programming”. This symposium
will present the state of the science in developmental programming
with a particular focus on the metabolic syndrome. It also marks
the 10th Anniversary of symposium support from the March of Dimes!
Wiley-Liss will sponsor a symposium Wednesday on molecular clocks
in embryonic development. This symposium, organized by the Publications
Committee, will cover a new and exciting area of research that investigates
how cells measure time in the embryo. Studies have found that developmental
timekeeping is controlled by intrinsic “molecular clocks”
expressed in cyclic pulses with periodicity independent of popular
oscillatory functions such as the cell cycle. Their timing is essential
for understanding the patterning of temporal gradients such as in
somite segmentation, and this work can be translated into understanding
human vertebral anomalies.
The Office of Rare Diseases at the National
Institutes of Health will sponsor a symposium Wednesday on genetic
and environmental risk factors for several major birth defects.
The interaction of genetic susceptibility and environmental exposure
explains some of the variance in expression of adverse genetic traits
and offers an opportunity for prevention of exposure in susceptible
individuals. This symposium will examine four disorders (renal agenesis,
polydactyly, hypospadias, and SALL1-related malformations) to illustrate
the ways in which the environment may interact with genetic endowment
to produce rare but important malformations. On Thursday we have
a symposium that addresses the impact of personalized nutrition
and medicine on perinatal development. The goal of personalized
medicine is to get the right therapeutic to the right individual
at the right time. Dietary agents such as vitamin A and folic acid
are prime examples of food-borne chemicals that can be better understood
at this level and thereby consumed in a manner promoting normal
perinatal development. These and other cases will be used to demonstrate
the utility of personalized nutrition and medicine to enhance children’s
health.
The International Life Sciences Institute
(ILSI) Health and Environmental Sciences Institute (HESI)-Developmental
and Reproductive Toxicology Technical Committee will sponsor a platform
session Sunday organized by the Public Affairs Committee which will
be derived from abstract submissions. This year, the theme will
be nonclinical studies that focus on applications and lessons learned
regarding pharmacogenomics in drug development and regulatory science.
“Pharmacogenomics” investigates how an individual’s
genetic composition affects response to drugs. Although many factors
can influence the individual response to drugs, an understanding
of individual genetic makeup is key to advanced diagnosis of individual
susceptibility, as well as more powerful therapeutic efficacy and
safety.
New research in cheminformatics and bioinformatics
is underway to utilize emerging resources in information technology
and molecular databases for making predictions related to developmental
and reproductive toxicity. A Tuesday workshop will address the applications
of high-information content data in reproductive and developmental
toxicology. On Thursday, a workshop will tackle the issue of achieving
worldwide elimination of folic acid-preventable spina bifida and
anencephaly. Folate optimization is essential to this important
public health campaign and this workshop will include a panel discussion
with opportunity for input from meeting attendees. Also on Thursday,
our regional partner the Midwest Teratology Association, will sponsor
a workshop on selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs).
A special satellite session has been
organized by the Public Affairs Committee (PAC) of the Teratology
Society and is designed to educate teachers and healthcare professionals
with the knowledge to empower them in the campaign to prevent alcohol
use during pregnancy. Local educators will be invited to attend
this satellite session which will be held at the University of Pittsburgh
on Tuesday, June 26 at 8:00 AM.
| We look forward to seeing you in Pittsburgh,
June 23-28, 2007! Remember, the abstract and the early bird
registration deadlines are February 15, 2007. For more information,
please visit: www.teratology.org/meetings/2007/.
|
Lewis Holmes, M.D.
MassGeneral Hospital for Children
The Teratology Society announces a search
for a new Editor for Birth Defects Research Part A. It
was with reluctance that the Society accepted Dr. Phil Mirkes’
resignation last year as his leadership as current Editor for Birth
Defects Research Part A was one defined by growth and success.
Dr. Lewis Holmes from Mass General Hospital for Children in Boston
has agreed to chair this committee and welcomes nominations from
the Society for this important position. Please send your nominations
to him at: holmes.lewis@MGH.harvard.edu.
Lew can also be contacted by phone at (617) 726-1742; information
can be faxed to (617) 724-1911. This editorship position is an important
position for our Society and we welcome your interest and involvement
in choosing a successor!
Many of our members identify new or recently
improved websites of direct interest to our scientists. This one
was identified by one of our student members, Josh Robinson, and
may be of interest to others. The website is http://genex.hgu.mrc.ac.uk/.
This website was created by the UK MRC
Human Genetics Unit in Edinburgh and it contains a “digital
atlas of mouse development” which is linked to an extensive
database of in situ gene expression in the developing mouse. The
Edinburgh Mouse Atlas Project (emap) creates 3-D movies that are
facilitated by interactive computer models which show gene expression
spatially within the embryo at successive stages during development.
We encourage you to view these exciting movies, a result of partnerships
at the University of Edinburgh School of Biomedical Sciences and
Glasgow School of Art.
rev. 14-FEB-2007
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