Category: News

  • What every enterprise should know about social-business tools

    Social-business tools are everyone in today’s enterprise, integrated into not just employee communication tools but also integrated into HR departments, finance departments, and other areas of day-to-day business. In the latest GigaOM Research podcast we hear from collaboration experts Stowe Boyd and David Coleman on the latest tools disrupting the enterprise and how to best integrate social tools into your business.

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    SHOW NOTES
    Host: Adam Lesser
    Speakers: Stowe Boyd and David Coleman

    • Social business software: The integrated approach
    • Social business software: Small and simple
    • LinkedIn gets pushed into social
    • How do you measure the value of social tools in the enterprise?
    • Disruption in the collaborative tools world
    • A “no fire” corporate policy: Could it change the business world?
    PREVIOUS GIGAOM PODCAST EPISODES:

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    Commutist interview: Joy of X author Steven Strogatz

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    Commutist, meet Nerdist, and interview with Chris Hardwick

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  • Blizzcon Returns To Anaheim On November 8

    Blizzard fans were understandably distraught last year when the beloved developer announced that Blizzcon had been canceled for the year. Some feared that the annual show was done for good, but fortunately, that is not the case.

    Blizzard announced today that Blizzcon is coming back in 2013. The show invites Blizzard fans from around the world to the Anaheim convention center on November 8. The event will promises to be bigger and better than ever, with fans of the company’s franchise, except for Lost Vikings, invited to take part in all the fun.

    “BlizzCon gives us a chance to connect with our players and share our latest projects in a very personal way,” said Mike Morhaime, CEO and cofounder of Blizzard Entertainment. “Members from all of our gaming communities have helped make this event bigger and better every time, and we look forward to meeting up and celebrating with them in November.”

    Blizzard is remaining mum on the specifics of Blizzcon 2013, but fans can expect to see the latest and greatest games from Blizzard. There might even be some unannounced games shown off as the developer doesn’t really have much beyond the third StarCraft expansion and the codenamed Titan MMO in their official pipeline.

    Those interested in Blizzcon will want to keep their browsers pointed at the event’s official Web site. Tickets to the event in 2011 sold out in seconds, and that’s likely to be true again this year.

  • OnRamp Will Build Second Austin Data Center

    The interior of the OnRamp data center in Raleigh as it was preparing to open. The company is also building a new data center in Austin, Texas. (Photo: OnRamp).

    The interior of the OnRamp data center in Raleigh as it was preparing to open. The company is also building a new data center in Austin, Texas. (Photo: OnRamp).

    Data center operations company OnRamp announced it is building a 42,000 square foot data center in Austin which will open early in the fourth quarter of this year. This will be the second data center for the company in Austin. The announcement of OnRamp’s Austin II project comes just a week after the company announced the opening of a data center in the heart of Research Triangle Park in Raleigh, NC.

    OnRamp says the additional facility was necessitated by demand. “We are excited to open a second, enterprise-class Data Center in Austin,” said OnRamp CEO Lucas Braun. “We’re an Austin-based company, and a large percentage of our managed and cloud hosting and HIPAA compliant hosting services are delivered by our teams in Austin.” The facility is being designed for industry-leading levels of high density computing, with the capability of delivering upwards of 30kW per rack, contiguously. In addition, the SSAE 16, SOC I Type II, HIPAA and PCI Data Center will feature a separate high security area for HIPAA hosting. OnRamp’s Redundant Isolated Path Power Architecture delivers true 2N power to customers, from the utility to the rack.

    OnRamp is working with Square One Consultants to oversee the design, development and construction of the facility.

    OnRamp was founded as an ISP in 1994 in Austin, Texas. Its first colo customer was a year later, and It’s first managed server came about in 2000. It built its first data center with 2N power in 2003. Private Cloud came in 2007, and an investment from Brown Robin Capital followed in 2009.

    The company offers colocation, cloud computing, high security hosting and disaster recovery services backed by what it calls Full7Layer support, which is, of course, support across all 7 layers including all the way to the application layer.

  • Girl Catches Fire In Hospital: Hand Sanitizer Involved?

    A girl who mysteriously caught fire while in the hospital for a head injury is making headlines this week, although the incident happened earlier this month.

    Doernbecher Children’s Hospital in Portland, Oregon held a press conference this week wherein they talked about 11-year old Ireland Lane, who suffered third-degree burns on a large portion of her body after her shirt mysteriously ignited in her hospital room. She jumped out of bed and ran from the room, where her father reportedly smothered the flames. Unfortunately, the fire caused serious injury to the girl, burning her chest, neck, arms, and earlobes on the very day she was to be released from the hospital. She is, however, expected to recover and is undergoing skin grafts to repair the damage.

    Officials say they are investigating whether Ireland’s use of hand sanitizer to clean off a rolling bedside table–on which she had been painting a wooden box as a departing gift for her nurses–paired with static electricity to ignite a spark.

    Amazingly, Ireland is also a cancer survivor. Her father says he is overwhelmed by how strong his daughter is.

    “She’s quite a tough one. She’s been through more than any child I’ve ever heard of, and to still walk around with a smile on her face and enjoy the things of the day that are going on, and be a kid is to me pretty amazing,” Stephen Lane said.

    This isn’t the first time hand sanitizer has been blamed for igniting flames, but investigators say they’ve never heard of the alcohol-based product causing a fire of this magnitude. There has been speculation that Ireland may have used a large amount of the sanitizer and then wiped her hands on her shirt before it was dry. Stephen Lane worries that more people don’t understand the risks of using similar products.

    “As readily available as hand sanitizer is nowadays, and how everybody sends it to school with their kids, it makes me much more worried,” he said.

    3M, the company that makes the brand of sanitizer used at the hospital, doesn’t want customers to worry.

    “When used as directed, it is entirely safe,” said spokeswoman Donna Fleming Runyon.

  • BlackBerry 10 and BlackBerry 7 OS: 5 Key Hardware Differences

    BlackBerry 10 and BlackBerry 7 OS

    By now, most of us know that BlackBerry 10 devices are different animals from their earlier counterparts. I still love my BlackBerry Bold 9900 smartphone, and it still works great. In the spirit of my dueling BlackBerry devices, I thought I’d share five quick things I’ve noticed as being big hardware differences between my BlackBerry Bold 9900 and the new BlackBerry Z10.

    1. Front-Facing Camera. I love having a front-facing camera for video conferencing, and I found myself wanting it on my BlackBerry Bold smartphone so I wouldn’t have to grab my BlackBerry PlayBook tablet. It’s a small thing, but to me it’s an important feature.
    2. 4G LTE. Availability of 4G speeds depend a great deal on your carrier, but the download speeds I’ve noticed on the BlackBerry Z10 definitely make videos and sharing faster and smoother.
    3. Apps and Games. While I definitely had a great collection of apps and games on my BlackBerry Bold smartphone, the graphics and processing capabilities of the BlackBerry Z10 are just that much better. What I’ve found in BlackBerry World is an awesome collection of fun and high quality games and productive apps that help me get through my day.
    4. Screen Resolution. Can we talk about 356 pixels per inch for second? It’s gorgeous. I remember being blown away by the 286 pixels per inch my BlackBerry Bold smartphone sported, but 356 is so much sweeter. And don’t get me started on the 1080p HD recording versus the BlackBerry Bold 9900’s 720p.
    5. Storage. Now that I’m grabbing more music and movies while traveling (thanks, 4G and retooled BlackBerry World), I appreciate the 16GB of onboard space versus the 8GB my BlackBerry Bold smartphone had. (Side note: Remember when 2GB was a ton of space?)

    Of course, since BlackBerry 10 is an entirely new OS, there are also a ton of user experience differences, but these five hardware goodies offer their own slice of mobile deliciousness as well.

    Which BlackBerry Z10 hardware features are you enjoying? Share your comments below!

  • Go the F**k to Sleep Author Has Some Words For Google

    Google has released its latest Authors@Google video, which features authors Adam Mansbach and T Cooper.

    The former is best known for his “children’s book for adults” titled Go the F**k to Sleep. The popular book was made even more popular when actor Samuel L. Jackson read it. He has also written the books Rage is Back, Shackling Water, Angry Black White Boy, The End of the Jews, and upcoming The Dead Run.

    Cooper is the author of Real Man Adventures, Lipshitz Six, or Two Angry Blondes and The Beaufort Diaries.

    Here’s their @Google Talks:

    More recent @Google talks here.

  • Get ready to move from Hotmail to Outlook

    If you use Hotmail then you may already know that you are moving to Outlook.com. You may not want to, but you are — unless you plan to scrap the whole thing and head over to Gmail, Yahoo mail or another service. Microsoft officially launched Outlook overnight, but the service beta debuted six months ago; we reviewed here already.

    So, to help users along in this moving process, the company posted a question and answer page appropriately titled “My Hotmail account was upgraded to Outlook.com”.

    The page is pretty simple — only nine questions and a video. However, there is quite a bit of information included and numerous links to additional details, like settings, POP3, Contacts, existing mail and more.

    Microsoft attempts to address some of the fear and questions that customers will almost certainly have. Things like “Do I have to get a new email address?” and “Why can’t I switch back to Hotmail?” All valid questions that longtime Hotmail users will face in the coming months.

    Give the company some credit for attempting to help its customers here, but killing off services, while a natural process in this industry, is never easy. It almost always results in some unhappy people and, frequently they are the more vocal ones. For instance my recent posts about the death of my beloved Live Mesh — yes I am still bitter. But, I have learned to move on, which is what Hotmail customers will need to do as well.

    Photo Credit: 3Dstock/Shutterstock

  • Apple pulls in 20% of all consumer technology revenue in U.S.

    Apple Consumer Technology
    For all the overwrought doom-and-gloom talk surrounding Apple (AAPL) lately, it’s easy to forget that the company is still the most valuable tech company in the world and that it’s an absolute cash cow that hauls in ungodly sums of money every year. Case in point: AppleInsider directs our attention to new research the NPD Group showing that Apple accounted for roughly one out of every five dollars generated by the consumer technology industry in the United States in 2012. This is actually an increase from 2011, when Apple accounted for 17.3% of consumer technology revenues in the United States.

    Continue reading…

  • Cologix Opens Second Site at Dallas INFOMART

    The distinctive facade of the InfoMart, where colocation provider Cologix now operates 40,000 square feet of data center space. (Photo: Cologix)

    The distinctive facade of the Dallas INFOMART, where colocation provider Cologix now operates two data centers. (Photo: Cologix)

    Interconnection and colocation company Cologix has been rapidly expanding since it acquired its first data center at the Dallas INFOMART from NaviSite back in 2010. Now, after expanding across North America, the company comes full circle, launching its second data center at the INFOMART.

    Cologix today announced the successful commissioning and launch of the new facility at the INFOMART, also known as 1950 North Stemmons Freeway. The 12,000 square foot data center holds over 300 cabinets and is supported by 3.2 megawatts of power from three diverse substations. The new Dallas facility is Cologix’s 12th North American data center, including key carrier hotel locations in Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Minneapolis and Dallas. Cologix bought its first data center at the INFOMART in late 2010 from NaviSite. The company first announced the addition of a second facility there in April 2012.

    The new data center includes hot aisle containment pods, modular power distribution units (PDUs) and in-row cooling technology, which collectively provide for rapid deployments and the ability to dynamically cool equipment specific to the needs of individual cabinets. “Our hot aisle containment and in-row cooling systems are unique in the Dallas market and provide for enhanced customer experience and efficiency,” said Rob DeVita, General Manager of Cologix Texas. “We are excited to introduce this technology to the Dallas community and look forward to supporting our customers’ growth.”

    Key Internet Data Hub

    Dallas-Fort Worth is the fourth largest metro market in the US and host to twenty Fortune 500 company headquarters.  Its central location and network density make it a primary Internet peering point and natural location for regional and national network nodes.

    “The continued rapid adoption of the cloud by all customer segments is dramatically elevating traffic and network performance requirements, which continues to heighten the value of colocation and interconnection options in the downtown INFOMART,” said Cologix CEO Grant van Rooyen.  “Cologix is focused on providing our customers network neutral access to broad connectivity options, represented today in this new Dallas inventory.”

    Customers at the new facility have the ability to directly interconnect with existing customers and 25+ networks in the existing Cologix meet-me room (MMR) as well as accessing other tenants in the carrier hotel.

    The Dallas INFOMART is a 1.2 million square foot technology hub with tenants including SoftLayer, ViaWest and Equinix, as well as network providers including MCI, Allegiance Telecom and Level 3. The Infomart was built by Trammell Crow in 1985, and was initially envisioned as a hub for computer industry trade shows. The building’s glass facade was designed to be a replica of the Crystal Palace, built in London in 1851 as part of the first World’s Fair.

  • Amnesia: A Machine For Pigs Coming Q2 2013

    Amnesia: The Dark Descent revitalized the survival horror genre on PC with its Lovecraftian atmosphere and distinct lack of offensive weaponry. The indie title went on to sell over one million copies.

    The sequel to that game, Amnesia: A Machine For Pigs, was originally scheduled to be out in time for Halloween 2012. Instead, gamers on last year’s Halloween got a teaser trailer full of darkness and eerie sounds.

    Today, Frictional Games has finally announced that A Machine for Pigs is nearing completion. The developer has updated its website with a message stating that the “final version” of the game has been received from indie developer thechineseroom. It is now undergoing testing and optimization, and is expected to be ready for release “around Q2 2013.”

    From the update:

    How come a game meant for Halloween 2012 has been delayed for so long? Originally we thought it would be a short, experimental game set in the universe of Amnesia, but thechineseroom had a vision that was bigger than that. As their work progressed, the potential for a much greater project emerged. What we ended up with is no longer what we had first imagined, but a fully fledged Amnesia game. A different kind of Amnesia, but definitely not a short experiment.

    Frictional stated that pricing, PC requirements, and “more information on the game” will be coming soon.

  • Chris Anderson livetweets: What makes an outstanding TED Talk? What are the challenges ahead for TED? And more…

    Chris-Anderson-imageTED curator Chris Anderson took to Twitter earlier today, spending an hour answering any question thrown his way by a TED enthusiast. The questions ranged from, “How will Americans respond to TED’s move to Vancouver?” to “Have you ever had someone present in sign language? See a full recap of the conversation here and, below, read some of the highlights.

  • You Can Watch a Live-Tweeted C-Section on Wednesday

    Tomorrow, you can watch the miracle of life unfold on Twitter.

    Women’s Memorial Hermann Hospital at Memorial City Medical Center in Houston Texas will be the first hospital to live-tweet a surgical birth.

    “This is a medically indicated c-section. 39-year-old mom had an urgent c-section before & chose not to VBAC. Our goal is to educate,” says Memorial Hermann. “Patient privacy is of utmost importance. Patient & family have consented & we’ll only disclose age & condition.”

    You’ll be able to follow multiple stages of the process: admission testing, anesthesia and delivery of the baby. It won’t be for the faint of heart, as Memorial Hermann promises live, close-up photography and video alongside the play-by-play-tweets.

    This is the same hospital that live-tweeted a brain surgery last May.

    You can follow all of the action on the @houstonhospital account and the special #MHbaby as well. Everything kicks off Wednesday morning at 7am CST.

  • Miyamoto Becomes A Ghostbuster, Talks Up Luigi’s Mansion: Dark Moon

    The business world will tell you that the Wii U is doomed. After all, the console only sold 57,000 units in January, which is by all accounts pretty bad. That being said, Nintendo is taking it all in stride, and are even having a little fun.

    You may remember Nintendo President Satoru Iwata sporting a Luigi hat last week in celebration of the Year of Luigi. I thought it couldn’t get better than that, but master game designer Shigeru Miyamoto strapped on Luigi’s ghostbusting vacuum, the Poltergust 5000, for an astronomical amount of fanservice in this extended look at Luigi’s Mansion: Dark Moon.

  • “Party Princess”: Manslaughter Charge Carries 30-Year Sentence

    The self-proclaimed “Party Princess” of Miami, Karlie Tomica, is now facing a DUI manslaughter charge after a Miami court added her blood-alcohol content to their case on Friday.

    20-year old Tomica allegedly left her job as bartender at the popular bar Nikki Beach nightclub on January 28th with over three times the legal limit of alcohol in her system and sped down Collins Avenue in her vehicle, striking famed local chef Stefano Riccioletti and killing him instantly. He was reportedly thrown more than thirty feet upon impact; in court documents, Tomica was said to have had bits of Riccioletti’s brain matter in her hair. She was so drunk, officials said, that after she was taken into custody she passed out at the police station.

    Tomica was originally charged with leaving the scene of a crime, but the alcohol content of her blood moved the judge to up the charge to DUI manslaughter last week.

    “Stefano is not here, and it doesn’t matter if it is a car or a gun, he was killed. And the persons or person responsible for that need to be held accountable,” said Jose Baez, an attorney for Riccioletti’s family.

    Tomica, whose Twitter profile proclaimed her a “party princess” and detailed her night of celebrating with a fake ID, was visibly upset in court and mentioned that she has finals this week. She has been placed on continued house arrest.

  • Alibaba Launches Search Engine Aliyun

    Alibaba has launched a new search engine called Aliyun, which makes use of the same brand as its mobile operating system. Both are actually operated by an Alibaba subsidiary, AliCloud.

    Google and Alibaba had a bit of a beef last year, regarding the OS. Acer was set to unveil a smartphone utilizing the OS, which (according to Google) is based on Android, but Google felt that it was a problem in that it was not compatible with the Android ecosystem. As TheNextWeb recaps:

    Rejecting Google’s claims that Aliyun OS is a forked version of Android, Alibaba pledged not to deviate from its mobile strategy. The company did, however, move to put some distance between it and Aliyun OS by spinning off the division.

    As Greg Sterling at Search Engine Land notes, Google only has less than 5% of the Chinese search market, but Aliyun’s search results pages more closely resemble Google’s (or at least an older version of Google’s) than they do market leader Baidu’s.

    Aliyun SERP

    Last month, Alibaba founder and CEO Jack Ma announced that he would shed his CEO title, but remain executive chairman. In December, the company, more known for its ecommerce offerings, announced that it had hit a huge annual sales milestone.

  • After bashing Ballmer, former Microsoft exec outlines turnaround plan for the company

    Joachim Kempin has some ideas about how Microsoft, his former employer, can achieve greatness again and they go beyond his already widely publicized call for the company to deep-six CEO Steve Ballmer.

    Kempin, who left Microsoft in 2002, was the exec who ran the company’s cash cow OEM business. He was the guy who cut the deals with hardware makers who bundled Microsoft Windows and Office on their machines. Those negotiations were by most accounts joachim kempinbrutal, leaving hardware partners like Dell and HP reeling. They also led some to call Kempin Microsoft’s Dark AngelAnd now he’s peddling a book on Microsoft and is penning a series of blogs for ReadWrite.

    Here are the some of his suggestions for Microsoft from his first post:

    1: Microsoft needs a tech guru. 

    Kempin writes:

    “The company needs a bold and charismatic executive with bona fide technical credentials to head all of its product divisions. This dynamic leader must not only serve as the main spokesperson for all products, but he or she must also inspire and command the respect of developers. (Unfortunate Ray Ozzie did not survive in this role, and the one who came after him, Craig Mundie, was from the beginning the wrong person.)”

    No kidding. This is true, and it was also true when Bill Gates started stepping back from day-to-day duties at Microsoft. Even when he dubbed Ozzie his successor as chief software architect in 2006, many wondered why he didn’t go for a younger, new-age thinker; a response to the Google guys. No one doubted Ozzie’s tech vision, but by that time Microsoft had already “missed” the internet and had to make up for lost time. Ozzie was of the same generation as Gates and Ballmer. The feeling was Microsoft really needed an infusion of new blood. Ozzie was new to Microsoft but he was rooted in the same client-server world they came from. For what it’s worth, Microsoft is bleeding many of its long-time execs with Robbie Bach, J Allard and Steven Sinofsky all exiting over the past two years.

    2: Go easy on the enterprise schtick

    Kempin said Microsoft’s focus on enterprise customers was lucrative but hurt the company with consumers.

    “… its reputation as an innovative tech leader deteriorated in the public eye. Once cool, today Microsoft is a well-oiled money machine, but the contagious excitement around the time when Windows 95 launched is long gone …. That torch has passed to the Apples, Googles, Twitters, and Facebooks of this world.”

    My take: I’m not sure anyone ever thought of Microsoft as “cool.” The big flash-bang Windows 95 event was fun; but cool? Hardly. Jay Leno hosted and even in 1995 Leno was your father’s talk show host. Even many language and compiler geeks found Borland a much more amenable culture than Microsoft.

    It’s true that Microsoft has gotten too enterprise-oriented. In fact, it appears hell-bent to replicate Oracle and IBM at a time when many question the relevance of those companies in a consumer IT focused world.  Even Microsoft Surface is painted with an “Office” paintbrush. Exceptions to this rule: Xbox and Kinect — which probably doesn’t carry the Microsoft brand on purpose. The reason companies update Windows and Office is to stay legal, not because of any compelling new features. Sad but true.

    3: Microsoft needs to go back to school.

    Kempin writes:

    “The US school system is antiquated and needs to be brought into the 21st century. This presents an opportunity for Microsoft to engage and help teachers, parents, and children to excel.”

    Assuming here that excel is not a pun, he has a point. Most students use Google Docs (and most of the students I know personally are using it on MacBooks.) And when is the last time you heard a student (or anyone) request a Dell (or HP or Acer) laptop running Windows?

    Kempin thinks Microsoft (with help from its big cool philanthropic friend The Gates Foundation) should just underwrite a complete re-do of technology in the nation’s schools. It would be a bold move. But Microsoft still needs to make products that people want to buy, not products that they accept because they have to.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Apple Hacked with Same Attack That Hit Facebook, Will Release Anti-Malware Tool for Infected Macs

    Facebook isn’t the only high-profile tech company reporting that hackers have targeted them. This time, it’s Apple.

    According to Reuters, Apple was hit with the same Java exploit that targeted Facebook employees last month (although the company didn’t release that info until last Friday).

    “Apple has identified malware which infected a limited number of Mac systems through a vulnerability in the Java plug-in for browsers. The malware was employed in an attack against Apple and other companies, and was spread through a website for software developers,” said Apple in a statement.

    Like Facebook, Apple claims that there is no evidence that any data was compromised.

    Apple says that the malware has affected other companies, but would not disclose any more on the topic. Reuters says that someone knowledgable of the investigation says that the attacks hit hundreds of companies, “including defense contractors.”

    The malware targeted Mac computers at Apple HQ, as well as the other companies hit.

    “This is the first really big attack on Macs,” said Reuters’ source. “Apple has more on its hands than the attack on itself.”

    According to Apple, the company will release software some time on Tuesday that they say will allow Mac users to purge the malware used in these attacks. We’ll update when/if Apple releases an official statement and/or the aforementioned software.

  • Samsung storms into Silicon Valley with plans to build ‘massive’ semiconductor campus

    Samsung Silicon Valley Presence
    While Samsung (005930) has traditionally been a Korean company through and through, it may now want to put more of an American stamp on its operations. The Los Angeles Times reports that Samsung has been aggressively expanding its presence in Silicon Valley recently by building its own innovation center, by launching a $100 million venture fund for Silicon Valley startups and by building “a massive new semiconductor campus with a distinctive design destined to compete with Apple’s proposed spaceship-like campus for the title of Silicon Valley’s most distinctive architectural landmark.”

    Continue reading…

  • Prince Michael Jackson: Job At “ET” To Precede Acting Career?

    Prince Michael Jackson, the 16-year old son of late pop icon Michael Jackson, recently landed a gig with “Entertainment Tonight” as an on-air correspondent.

    The teenager got to sit down with the stars of “Oz The Great And Powerful” for his first job–including director Sam Raimi and actors James Franco and Zach Braff–and got some advice on how to pursue his goals, which he says include becoming a well-rounded screenwriter, producer, actor, and director.

    Franco said, “I always tell people, just go out and try, and stop waiting around or dreaming it’s going to happen. Just go and start doing things on your own.”

    Jackson and his younger sister, Paris, have both expressed an interest in going into the entertainment industry in some way, and Prince Michael seems to have his goals clearly outlined. The teen credits his father for any attributes that are complimented, such as the adult way he handles himself despite his young age.

    “That’s what most people say. That was all thanks to my dad. He raised me right,” he said.

  • UCLA scientists develop new therapeutics that could accelerate wound healing

    In “before” and “after” photos from advertisements for wound-healing ointments, bandages and antibiotic creams, we see an injury transformed from an inflamed red gash to smooth and flawless skin.
     
    What we don’t appreciate is the vital role that our own natural biomolecules play in the healing process, including their contribution to the growth of new cells and the development of new blood vessels that provide nutrients to those cells.
     
    Now, UCLA researchers led by Heather Maynard, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry and a member of UCLA’s California NanoSystems Institute, are working to take advantage of our body’s ability to heal itself by developing new bio-mimicking therapeutics that could be used to treat skin wounds.
     
    Among the key players involved in natural wound-healing is a signaling molecule known as basic fibroblast growth factor, or bFGF, which is secreted by our cells to trigger processes that are involved in healing, as well as embryonic development, tissue regeneration, bone regeneration, the development and maintenance of the nervous system, and stem cell renewal.
     
    bFGF has been widely investigated as a tool doctors could potentially use to promote or accelerate these processes, but its instability outside the body has been a significant hurdle to its widespread use, Maynard said.    
     
    Now, Maynard and her team have discovered how to stabilize bFGF based on the principle of mimicry. Relying on the growth factor’s ability to bind heparin — a naturally occurring complex sugar found on the surface of our cells — the team synthesized a polymer that mimics the structure of heparin. When attached to bFGF, the new polymer makes the protein stable to the many stresses that normally inactivate it, rendering it a more suitable candidate for medical applications.
     
    The research is published Feb. 17 in the online edition of the journal Nature Chemistry and will appear in an upcoming print edition of the journal.
     
    UCLA co-authors of the research include graduate students Thi Nguyen and Caitlin Decker, former postdocs Dr. Sung-Hye Kim and Dr. Darice Wong, and Joseph Loo, professor of chemistry and biochemistry.
     
    The research was federally funded by the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation.
     
    Our ability to heal from wounds is essential to our survival. When those natural healing processes are compromised, serious wounds can lead to infection and other health problems. People with diabetes, for example, can have wounds that heal very slowly. The resulting chronic wounds are debilitating and can lead to loss of limbs or even death. Yet, despite the need for wound dressings that can stimulate the body to heal wounds, very few are curative.
     
    “This very important clinical need is the motivation behind our research,” Maynard said.
     
    The importance of fibroblast growth factor was recognized in 1973, when biologist Hugo Armelin discovered that this previously unknown chemical, extracted from the pituitary gland, successfully caused cells to divide. Since then, researchers have applied fibroblast growth factor to wounds such as foot ulcers resulting from diabetes, but the treatments have not been very effective. What scientists now recognize, Maynard said, is that these growth factors typically lose their activity quickly in storage.
     
    Knowing that other key biomolecules have been stabilized before with the help of polymers, Maynard and her team developed a strategy to maintain bFGF activity by taking advantage of its known structure and binding capabilities. Their new polymer, p(SS-co-PEGMA), mimics heparin’s natural ability to stabilize the growth factor. 
     
    After showing that p(SS-co-PEGMA) was non-toxic to human cells important in wound healing, they used it to conjugate bFGF and demonstrated that they could keep the growth factor active outside of the body for extended periods of time, even after it is exposed to heat, cold, enzymes that would normally break it down, and acidic conditions like those found in the wound injury setting. Moreover, they showed that this bound bFGF functions just like normal bFGF to trigger the same signaling pathways involved in the healing process.
     
    The advance is an important step in the use of growth factors for therapy. The ability to stabilize bFGF means that it can be potentially stored, shipped and made available for use by doctors and patients when needed any time and anywhere, Maynard said.
     
    The group is testing their new material with dermatologists Dr. Lloyd Miller, an associate professor of dermatology at Johns Hopkins University, and Dr. Jenny Kim, an associate professor of clinical medicine and dermatology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, a member of the CNSI, and chief of dermatology for the Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System. The group is also researching ways to stabilize other proteins involved in wound healing and ways to make bFGF more active.
     
    “This stable bFGF–polymer conjugate may also be useful in diseases other than wound healing — for example, vocal chord repair, cardiac repair and bone regeneration,” Maynard said. “More generally, we think that this idea of making polymers that mimic natural stabilizers is useful in a wide range of fields.” 
     
    The California NanoSystems Institute is an integrated research facility located at UCLA and UC Santa Barbara. Its mission is to foster interdisciplinary collaborations in nanoscience and nanotechnology; to train a new generation of scientists, educators and technology leaders; to generate partnerships with industry; and to contribute to the economic development and the social well-being of California, the United States and the world. The CNSI was established in 2000 with $100 million from the state of California. The total amount of research funding in nanoscience and nanotechnology awarded to CNSI members has risen to over $900 million. UCLA CNSI members are drawn from UCLA’s College of Letters and Science, the David Geffen School of Medicine, the School of Dentistry, the School of Public Health and the Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science. They are engaged in measuring, modifying and manipulating atoms and molecules — the building blocks of our world. Their work is carried out in an integrated laboratory environment. This dynamic research setting has enhanced understanding of phenomena at the nanoscale and promises to produce important discoveries in health, energy, the environment and information technology. 
     
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