ISAJ Newsletter - Volume 10, Issue 2 (September 2025)
Features research on aquatic bacterial disease prevention using affinity silk filters, IgM-specific antibodies in Medaka for vaccine development, and ISAJ 16th Symposium announcement
The December 2019 issue presents insights from the Global Biotech Revolution Gap Summit at MIT, breakthrough research on synthetic genetic switches for cancer immunotherapy, and innovative railway track monitoring using observable train models.
Key Insights
Important takeaways and highlights from this issue
Below you'll find condensed summaries from our newsletter articles. To explore complete research details, figures, and references, view the full newsletter.
Greetings and a warm welcome on the second issue of ISAJ Newsletter for 2019! We take this opportunity to convey the seasonal greetings for coming festive season. May happiness and prosperity fill your life forever!
In this issue, we present three diverse articles. Two of them briefly summarize research work on track monitoring and anti-cancer treatment, while the third article recaps the experience at Gap Summit 2019 hosted at Broad Institute of MIT & Harvard, Boston.
We take pleasure in informing that our 10th ISAJ annual symposium on “Interdisciplinary Science and Technology Innovation for Sustainable Society” was held on December 9, 2019 at Osaka University Hall, Toyonaka Campus. The event commemorated the 10th anniversary of ISAJ. H.E. Mr. Sanjay Kumar Verma, Ambassador of India to Japan inaugurated the symposium and Mr. B. Shyam, Consul General of India Osaka-Kobe delivered a special lecture. The symposium was attended by approximately 60 Indian and Japanese researchers.
By Ankita Jain, Business Development Associate, Healios K.K.
I was selected as one of the 100 Leaders of Tomorrow by Global Biotech Revolution (GBR) for the world-class biotechnology leadership summit held June 16-20, 2019 at Kendall Square, Cambridge, MA.
The aim of the Gap summit is to bring together different stakeholders ranging from academia to industry and from NGOs to international organizations, to discuss and solve the different ‘gaps’ in the global biotech ecosystem. Themes for this year revolved around:
The 5-day summit kicked off with introductory remarks by Dr. Tedros Adhanom, Director General, World Health Organization. This was followed by panel discussions featuring representatives from:
The 100 Leaders participated in a 4-month long Bio-Innovation Competition. I collaborated with 4 other leaders from Denmark, UK & US. Under mentorship from Johnson & Johnson R&D leaders, we developed a digital solution for providing first-line screening for women’s fertility health. Selected teams received initial seed-funding and mentorship to build biotech startups.
Convergence, Consensus & Coordination - More interdisciplinary teams will be needed to collaborate and co-develop innovative solutions for addressing both present and future challenges.
Applications for Gap Summit 2020 are open at www.gapsummit.com/apply/
By Madhu Malinee, Kyoto University
Cancer is the second most leading cause of deaths worldwide. The number of new cancer cases per year is expected to rise to 23.6 million by 2030. While chemotherapy is the most preferred treatment, toxic side effects and resistance warrant alternative strategies.
The interaction of programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) and its ligand (PD-L1) causes T cell inhibition, thereby inhibiting anti-tumor immunity. U.S. FDA has approved anti-PD-1 or anti-PD-L1 antibodies for many cancers. However, the high cost of PD-1 blockade therapy (approx. USD $1M per patient per year) restricts its worldwide application, considering 70% of cancer patients are from developing countries.
We have developed designer PIPs (N-Methylpyrrole and N-methylimidazole hairpin polyamides) as a cost-effective combinatorial approach:
We synthesized Chb-PIPs that selectively switch OFF PD-L1 gene expression:
These initial findings pave the way for development of cost-effective PD-1 blockade therapy to benefit more cancer patients globally.
By Dr. T. Jothi Saravanan, JSPS Postdoctoral Fellow, Yokohama National University
Local railway networks suffer from age-related deterioration and poor maintenance. Track profile, which directly influences ride quality and safety, needs to be estimated for maintenance purposes.
Currently, Track Recording Vehicles (TRV) such as Doctor Yellow in Japan are utilized for track condition monitoring. However, TRVs are:
We have developed a robust inverse analysis scheme for track geometry estimation from local in-service train responses:
This system provides:
The proposed approach enables efficient and frequent track monitoring using regular in-service trains, potentially transforming railway maintenance practices.
The 10th ISAJ Annual Symposium on “Interdisciplinary Science and Technology Innovation for Sustainable Society” was successfully held on December 9, 2019 at Osaka University Hall. This milestone event commemorated ISAJ’s decade of fostering India-Japan scientific collaboration.
Access the full newsletter with detailed research, figures, and references.
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Newsletter Details
Volume 4, Issue 2
December 2019
Dr. Mahendra Kumar Pal
National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience (NIED)
Features research on aquatic bacterial disease prevention using affinity silk filters, IgM-specific antibodies in Medaka for vaccine development, and ISAJ 16th Symposium announcement
Features India-Japan STI Exchange Year, nonlinear optical phenomena in quantum materials, Inconel 718 fatigue modeling, and ISAJ Hokkaido Symposium 2024
Features discovery of SMS inhibitors for fatty liver disease, HAMR magnetic storage technology, and 15th ISAJ Annual Symposium report
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