Barry Elkind

Manager, Technology & Venture Development (Head, Molecular Diagnostics) MaRS Innovation

  • Toronto ON

Commercializing life science technologies in the areas of molecular diagnostics, medical devices and therapeutics

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Biography

Barry holds a B.Sc. from York University, a M.Sc. from the Sackler Faculty of Medicine at Tel Aviv University and a Ph.D. in molecular cell biology from the Weizmann Institute of Science, followed by a postdoctoral fellowship at Yale University in yeast vesicular trafficking.

Barry pursued more applied research at the Hungarian Academy of Science and the National Institutes of Health, where he was a NRC Fellow.

His industry experience includes lead molecular biologist at Ikonisys, a medical device start-up company, and science and technology research analyst for Luminex where he assessed technologies in the molecular diagnostic and research realms gaining regulatory, product development and intellectual property knowledge.

Barry has extensive experience managing international, multi-million dollar, government and industry-funded programs (Ontario Genomic Institute) and projects (The Cystic Fibrosis Gene Modifier Project).

He has published 16 peer-reviewed publications, holds two patents and has delivered talks in various countries. Barry’s interests combine science and business through interaction with diverse stakeholders to bring cool, useful life science projects to market.

Industry Expertise

Biotechnology
Real Estate Dev/Ops
Advanced Medical Equipment
Research

Areas of Expertise

Molecular Cell Biology
Molecular Diagnostics
Life Sciences
Commercialization
Project and Program Management

Education

Weizmann Institute of Science

Ph.D.

Molecular Cell Biology

1995

Tel Aviv University

M.Sc.

Molecular Virology

1988

York University

B.Sc.

Biology

1986

Languages

  • Hungarian
  • Hebrew
  • English

Style

Availability

  • Panelist
  • Workshop Leader
  • Corporate Training

Patents

Homo and Heterodimer Proteins of the Abcg Family, Methods For Detection and Screening Modulators Thereof

United States 20080187935

2005-07-07

The invention relates to methods for screening selective modulators of half transporter proteins of the ABCG family, more closely of ABCG1 and ABCG4. In particular the invention relates to methods for determining whether a substance is a selective activator, an inhibitor or a substrate of an ABCG1 or ABCG4 homodimer or of an ABCG1/ABCG4 heterodimer protein, methods for detection of ABCG1 protein in a biological sample, methods for modulating the function of said proteins, and methods for detecting the presence of and/or quantitating ABCG1/ABCG4 heterodimer activity in a biological sample. Moreover, the invention relates to isolated ABCG1/ABCG4 heterodimer proteins and antibodies selective for ABCG1 or ABCG4. The closely related human ABC half-transporters, ABCG1 and ABCG4, have been suggested to play an important role in cellular lipid/sterol regulation. ABCG1 and ABCG4 and mutants thereof have been expressed and studied by the present inventors in whole cells as well as isolated membrane preparations. A large number of compounds have been screened in this system. Co-expression of the ABCG1 and ABCG4 half transporters resulted in heterodimers.

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Articles

Does wild-type p53 play a role in normal cell differentiation?

Seminars in Cancer Biology

1994-01-01


Inactivation of the p53 tumor suppressor gene plays a major role in malignant transformation. The central question in this issue is concerned with the understanding of the function of p53 in normal cells and its deregulation in cancer cells. Several in vitro and in vivo experimental models have indicated that induction of cells to undergo differentiation involve up-regulation in the expression of the p53. In the case of B cell differentiation, p53 was found to be involved in several steps of the differentiation pathway. The conclusion that p53 plays a role in normal development and differentiation in vivo is substantiated by the observation that p53 is expressed during embryonic development and is detected at low levels in a number of organs of adult mice. Accentuated levels of p53 in testes of adult mice, suggests that p53 plays a role in the meiotic process of spermatogenesis. B cell differentiation and spermatogenesis are biological pathways which normally involve DNA reshuffling and rearrangements. In accordance with the notion that p53 is associated with DNA repair it is tempting to speculate that at least in these physiological pathways p53 functions as a master gene that controls genome integrity.

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The DNA binding activity of wild type p53 is modulated by blocking its various antigenic epitopes

Oncogene

1995-01-01


Interaction of wild type p53 with specific DNA target sequences, which is dictated by several structural domains, can be modified by blocking the different antigenic epitopes of the protein. Comparison of p53 protein expressed by recombinant bacteria (wtp53-Bac) to that produced in an eukaryotic system by a vaccinia expression vector (wtp53-Vac), indicated that only the later exhibited spontaneous DNA-binding activity. Furthermore, DNA-binding patterns of these wild type p53 proteins were affected differently by their interactions with monoclonal anti-p53 antibodies recognizing individual antigenic epitopes of the molecule. While the vaccinia derived p53 that spontaneously bound DNA is supershifted by the N'-terminal specific antibodies PAb-248, the bacterial derived p53 protein that retains this antigenic epitope but does not bind DNA spontaneously, is not affected. The C'-terminal specific PAb-421 antibodies accelerated binding of the bacterial p53 protein and modified the pattern of the interaction of the vaccinia derived p53 DNA. DNA-binding patterns generated by PAb-421 and PAb-248, suggest that either interaction of wild type p53 is dependent on modification of the p53 protein or that it interacts with cellular factors which their activity can be mimicked by PAb-421. Saturation of both types of wild type p53 with several anti-p53 monoclonal antibodies directed against the wild type p53 specific epitope that maps to the N'-terminal border of the DNA-binding region, blocked specific DNA-binding. The fact that most p53 mutants have lost the wild type p53 conformation specific epitope coupled with the observation that blocking of this site by binding specific antibodies, prevents the interaction of wild type p53 with DNA, suggests that maintaining the correct structural conformation of this site is central for DNA-binding activity. The wild type specific epitope which maps to the N'-terminal border of the DNA-binding region is neighboring the first beta-strand detected by the recent crystallographic analysis.

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Augmented DNA-binding activity of p53 protein encoded by a carboxyl-terminal alternatively spliced mRNA is blocked by p53 protein encoded by the regularly spliced form

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.

1995-07-18

DNA-binding activity of the wild-type p53 is central to its function in vivo. However, recombinant or in vitro translated wild-type p53 proteins, unless modified, are poor DNA binders. The fact that the in vitro produced protein gains DNA-binding activity upon modification at the C terminus raises the possibility that similar mechanisms may exist in the cell. Data presented here show that a C-terminal alternatively spliced wild-type p53 (ASp53) mRNA expressed by bacteria or transcribed in vitro codes for a p53 protein that efficiently binds DNA. Our results support the conclusion that the augmented DNA binding activity of an ASp53 protein is probably due to attenuation of the negative effect residing at the C terminus of the wild-type p53 protein encoded by the regularly spliced mRNA (RSp53) rather than acquisition of additional functionality by the alternatively spliced C' terminus. In addition, we found that ASp53 forms a complex with the non-DNA-binding RSp53, which in turn blocks the DNA-binding activity of ASp53. Interaction between these two wild-type p53 proteins may underline a mechanism that controls the activity of the wild-type p53 protein in the cell.

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