Life Science

Life Science Washington today announced its 2019 inductees into the Washington Life Science Hall of Fame, which recognizes innovative leaders and industry pioneers in Washington state who have made significant contributions to the life sciences. The recipients will be honored at a special luncheon April 25 during Life Science Innovation Northwest, the largest annual life science conference in the Pacific Northwest.

“The Washington Life Science Hall of Fame is one of the highlights of our organization’s year,” said Leslie Alexandre, DrPH, President and CEO of Life Science Washington. “It is an opportunity to step back and honor four champions in our industry; people who have made extraordinary contributions spanning basic science research through the commercialization of life-saving technologies for the betterment of patients, science, and industry around the world. We are grateful they live and work here in Washington State, enriching our scientific and entrepreneurial community.”

The 2019 Hall of Fame inductees include:

Colleen Delaney, MD, MSc, Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Executive Vice President of Research and Development, Nohla Therapeutics

Colleen Delaney, MD, MSc is Scientific Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Executive Vice President of Research and Development of Nohla Therapeutics, Inc., a cellular therapy company focused on development of universal, off-the-shelf cell therapies for patients with hematologic malignancies and other critical diseases. She is an Affiliate and former Member of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Clinical Research Division, where she also held the Madeline Dabney Adams Endowed Chair in AML Research and was the principal investigator of an active, NIH-funded laboratory. In 2006, she established and became the Director of the Cord Blood Transplant Program at the Fred Hutch/Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, which has grown to be one of the leading programs in the country and the coordinating center of several multicenter clinical trials.

Dr. Delaney’s laboratory focused on the role of the Notch signaling pathway in the regulation and directed differentiation of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells for clinical applications. This work led to several clinical trials investigating the potential of cryopreserved, non-HLA matched “off the shelf” ex vivo expanded cord blood progenitor cells to provide rapid but transient hematopoietic reconstitution in the settings of cord blood transplant and dose-intensive chemotherapy, ultimately leading to the spin-out of Nohla Therapeutics in December 2015. Dr. Delaney received her MSc from Oxford University and her MD from Harvard Medical School and is the recipient of numerous awards, including the prestigious Damon Runyon Foundation Clinical Investigator Award, the Dr. Ali Al-Johani Award in recognition of exemplary clinical medical care and compassion to patients and families, the Seattle Business Journal’s Leaders in Health Care Award for Outstanding Medical Research and the Seattle American Women in Science’s Award for the Scientific Advancement and Leadership in STEM.

Christopher Henney, PhD

Retired. Co-Founder, Immunex, Icos, and Dendreon

Dr. Christopher Henney came to Washington State in 1978 to lead Immunology at the newly formed Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center and to teach and serve as a professor at the University of Washington. Intrigued by the burgeoning opportunities in recombinant DNA technology, he left academia to join what was then a fledgling biotechnology industry. In 1981 Dr. Henney co-founded Immunex, which grew to become a fully integrated pharmaceutical company employing 1600 people. Immunex focused on discovering, developing, manufacturing and selling a new class of gene-derived pharmaceuticals. The company was acquired by Amgen in 2002, and its lead drug, Enbrel, remains a best seller worldwide for the treatment of autoimmune diseases including rheumatoid arthritis.

Dr. Henney went on to co-found two more biotechnology companies: Icos and Dendreon Corporation. In both, he brought to life breakthrough drugs in the form of Cialis (Icos) and Provenge (Dendreon). In 2010 Provenge became the first immunotherapeutic vaccine approved by the FDA for the treatment of prostate cancer.

As a senior statesman for the industry, Dr. Henney remains deeply involved in all entrepreneurial aspects of the biotechnology industry – serving as Chairman or board member of several companies, both public and private. He is renowned globally for his many contributions to the field. In 2011, Dr. Henney was elected to the International Biotechnology CEOs Hall of Fame.

Ronald Howell

Chief Executive Officer, Washington Research Foundation (WRF)

As Chief Executive Officer of Washington Research Foundation for nearly 3 decades, Ronald Howell leads one of the most successful technology transfer grant-making and investment organizations in the nation. He joined WRF in 1989 to execute the Foundation’s licensing strategy on Dr. Benjamin Hall’s platform technology expressing heterologous proteins in yeast. Becoming CEO of WRF in 1992, he led the WRF team through an expansion of the organization and its licensing programs.

As one of the early architects of the WRF, Mr. Howell helped create the licensing programs that have delivered more than $535 million to not-for-profit research institutions in Washington State. Under Mr. Howell’s leadership, the foundation’s venture investment arm, WRF Capital, was formed in 1994 with a mission to invest in early-stage science, engineering, and technology companies in Washington State. The fund has backed more than 98 companies, with more than 60 exits. Today the active portfolio includes 37 innovative companies, about half of them in life sciences. In addition to serving as a very important early investor in life science and tech companies throughout Washington, WRF has created numerous grant programs to support the recruitment, training and development of investigators.

Mr. Howell has served on many prominent boards at the University of Washington, Washington State University, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and The W Fund. A proud Cougar, Mr. Howell holds a degree in biochemistry from Washington State University.

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  1. Cutting teens' evening screen time can improve their sleep in just one week, a new study finds.

    Research shows that exposure to too much light in the evening -- particularly blue light from smartphones, tablets and computers -- can affect the brain's clock and production of the sleep hormone melatonin, resulting in reduced sleep time and quality.

    It's believed to be a bigger problem among kids and teens than among adults. This study by researchers in the Netherlands zeroed in on how screen time affects teens' sleep.

    On average, teens who spent more than four hours a day looking at a screen took 30 minutes longer to fall asleep, woke up 30 minutes later and had more signs of sleep loss, including moodiness, fatigue and poor concentration, than teens with less than an hour a day of screen time, the study found.

    Researchers then assessed how blocking blue light with glasses and forbidding screen time during the evening affected sleep patterns of 25 frequent screen users.

    After just one week, the teens had fewer signs of sleep loss -- and they were falling asleep and waking up 20 minutes sooner.

    "Here we show very simply that these sleep complaints can be easily reversed by minimizing evening screen use or exposure to blue light," study author Dirk Jan Stenvers said in a society news release. "Based on our data, it is likely that adolescent sleep complaints and delayed sleep onset are at least partly mediated by blue light from screens."

    He's a clinical fellow in the Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism at Amsterdam UMC, a medical and research center.

    The next step is to determine whether reducing screen time improves sleep over the long term, and whether adults get the same benefits.

    "Sleep disturbances start with minor symptoms of tiredness and poor concentration but in the long-term we know that sleep loss is associated with increased risk of obesity, diabetes and heart disease," Stenvers said. "If we can introduce simple measures now to tackle this issue, we can avoid greater health problems in years to come."

    The study was presented May 19 at the European Society of Endocrinology's annual meeting in Lyon, France. Research presented at meetings is typically considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

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