April 8, 2017

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Fresh Express Recalls Batch After Dead Bat Found In Prepackaged Salad

Fresh Express announced a recall of a “limited distribution” of its prepackaged Organic Marketside Spring Mix, after two people from Florida found an unwelcome organism in one container.

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An unwelcome discovery by a couple of salad eaters included a sordid new ingredient.

On Saturday, the company Fresh Express announced a precautionary recall of some of its prepackaged salad mixes, after two people in Florida say they found a dead bat in their leafy greens.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the two had eaten some of the product before finding the decomposed organism in a 5-ounce clear container of the Organic Marketside Spring Mix.

But “out of an abundance of caution,” Fresh Express says in a statement, all Organic Marketside Spring Mix salads from that production lot are subject to the recall.

The mix in question was distributed exclusively to Walmart stores located in the Southeastern region of the U.S. Walmart has since pulled the product from its shelves, the company adds, and no other Marketside salads are included in the recall.

Florida health officials, the FDA and the CDC have launched an investigation into the matter.

Due to the animal’s decayed condition, the CDC couldn’t immediately rule out whether this particular bat carried rabies, but recommended the two people who ate the contaminated salad receive treatment for the disease.

“Both people report being in good health and neither has any signs of rabies,” the CDC says.

The deadly rabies virus is endemic to bats across the U.S., but is rarely contracted by humans. And, as the CDC points out, transmission through consuming an infected animal is “extremely uncommon.” The agency adds that it hasn’t heard of any other cases of bat material found in packaged salads.

“People who have eaten the recalled salad product and did not find animal material are not at risk and do not need to contact their health department,” the CDC advises.

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Saturday Sports: Baseball's Back And Golden State Warriors On Winning Streak

NPR’s Scott Simon speaks with Howard Bryant of ESPN.com about spring season beginnings for baseball and the NBA playoffs.

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

It’s time for sports.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

SIMON: Springtime and birds chirp, flowers bloom and the Cubs are back in blue, and everyone else is suddenly coming for them. Howard Bryant of espn.com and ESPN The Magazine joins us as always. Howard, thanks so much for being with us.

HOWARD BRYANT: Oh, good morning, Scott. I am – I’m afraid of that mesmerizing, intimidating voice of yours right there. They are coming for the Cubs, aren’t they?

SIMON: Yeah. Well, it’s one of the first…

BRYANT: It’s not something you get to say very often.

SIMON: (Laughter) I’ve – not in 108 years. All right. What are you looking forward to in this baseball season?

BRYANT: I’m looking forward to seeing how the Cubs respond. They are the best team in baseball. They’re the world champions, as we finally get to say after all this time. They were the best (unintelligible)…

SIMON: I’m sorry. I – we had a bad connection. Could you say that again?

BRYANT: (Laughter) Say that again.

SIMON: Yeah.

BRYANT: The World Champion Chicago Cubs.

SIMON: Oh, now I hear it. Go ahead, Howard, yes.

BRYANT: And so actually for the last two years, they’ve been the best team in baseball and now in a third. It’s one of the things that is very, very difficult to do in the National League especially, which is to win a championship after winning a championship – repeating. It hasn’t happened in 40 – more than 40 years. The last team to do it was the Big Red Machine, 1975 and ’76.

SIMON: Wow.

BRYANT: In the American League, we’ve seen it. The Yankees have done it. The Toronto Blue Jays have done it. But in the National League, very, very difficult. So to see how the Cubs respond, to see how they deal with being champions, to see if that fire is still there and all the luck that happens too that you need to win, the Cubs are going to be – they were a story last year, and they’re going to be a story again this year.

SIMON: Yeah. My family and I are going to be at the game in Wrigley Field, first game, home game, on Monday night. And if Joe Maddon is listening, I’m ready. OK, Joe? Just signal me in the stands. I’m ready any day. You know, I can pitch, I can pinch hit, whatever.

BRYANT: Angling to get on the field yet again, Scott Simon.

SIMON: Yes, absolutely. Let’s go to basketball. In the East, the Cleveland Cavaliers took apart the Boston Celtics. In the West, the Golden State Warriors have won thu, thu, thu, thu (ph) 13 games in a row. Kevin Durant should return tonight. Are we looking at another Cleveland-Golden State matchup down the road?

BRYANT: Well, it looked pretty bad for a while for the Cavaliers because they hadn’t been playing well. They hadn’t been doing the things that they had done. But then again, who do they have? They’ve got the best player in the game. They’ve got LeBron James. And when you have LeBron James on your team, suddenly all of your ailments can go away in a night. And they went out to Boston last Wednesday, and they destroyed the Celtics, who were tied with them for first place in the East. And you have the Warriors who didn’t even have Kevin Durant because he was injured, and they go out and win 13 in a row without him. And now he’s back tonight, and once again, it looks like the question is going to be what it’s been the last two years. Can anybody beat these two teams four times before they meet each other? It’s never happened in the NBA history before where you’ve got two teams that meet for a championship three straight years. So this is pretty remarkable.

It’s no question that the best team in the NBA is the Golden State Warriors. And they are the team to beat. But LeBron James has been to the NBA Finals six straight years, and he’s doing something that Michael Jordan never did. He’s doing something that only Bill Russell had done before, to go to the finals this many times. It’s a fascinating matchup because you would like to think that somebody could challenge these two teams. But right now, they are head and shoulders above everybody else. In the West, it’ll be fun to see what happens. In the East, I think that once LeBron starts to go into that playoff gear, I don’t think anybody can beat him.

SIMON: He’s kind of been saving himself, hasn’t he?

BRYANT: Well, he has to. He’s got a lot of miles. You forget that he’s been in the game since 2003, and yet, he still keeps carrying the franchise. I want to see it. I think everybody wants to see it, unless you’re in San Antonio, but Warriors Cavaliers three will be fantastic.

SIMON: All right. Howard Bryant of espn.com and ESPN The Magazine. Thanks so very much, Howard. Talk to you soon.

BRYANT: My pleasure.

(SOUNDBITE OF COREY HENRY’S “TELL YA MAMA NEM”)

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A Baby With 3 Genetic Parents Seems Healthy, But Questions Remain

Mitochondrial diseases can be passed from mothers to their children in DNA.

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JGI/Tom Grill/Getty Images/Blend Images

Last fall, the New York-based reproductive endocrinologist John Zhang made headlines when he reported the birth of the world’s first “three-parent” baby — a healthy boy carrying the blended DNA of the birth mother, her husband and an unrelated female donor.

The technique, called mitochondrial replacement therapy, allowed the 36-year-old mother to bypass a defect in her own genome that had led, twice before, to children born with Leigh syndrome, a devastating neurological disorder that typically culminates in death before age 3.

While heralded in many circles as a breakthrough, the news triggered numerous ethical and scientific questions, many of which remained unanswered at the time. Last week, Zhang and his colleagues at the New Hope Fertility Center provided some answers — and raised yet more concerns.

John Zhang of the New Hope Fertility Clinic in Manhattan performed the procedure that used DNA from three people to create a baby boy.

Courtesy of the New Hope Fertility Clinic

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Courtesy of the New Hope Fertility Clinic

Their new report, published in the journal Reproductive BioMedicine Online, describes both the technique and the participants in greater detail, something that fellow researchers had demanded in order to properly scrutinize Zhang’s methodology.

But in publishing the new material, the journal editors themselves also noted that Zhang’s report still contains “weaknesses and limitations in a number of areas,” including lingering questions about informed consent, the full risks of mitochondrial replacement therapy and the long-term health of the child.

“Although we were able to encourage the authors to include more details of their work in the submission,” journal editor and clinical embryologist Mina Alikani noted in an accompanying editorial co-written with her colleagues, “some uncertainties concerning methodologies and results still remain.”

In a statement provided by the New Hope facility, Zhang conceded that more work needs to be done. “There is always concern about any new procedure and innovation implemented on humans,” Zhang said. “We agree that there are still a lot of unknowns about this technique and will make every effort to monitor the boy’s ongoing progress and test for any adverse outcomes.”

A key weakness in Zhang’s work, according to critics, is that the procedure is not approved in the United States, which forced the team to undertake the procedure in Mexico. “This particular experiment is being done almost entirely outside the normal regulatory structure,” says bioethicist and pediatrician Jeffrey Botkin of the University of Utah, who participated in an Institute of Medicine committee last year that issued a call for more animal research on mitochondrial replacement therapy.

Without proper oversight, Botkin says, vital questions about the technique, as well as the impact of such experiments on resulting embryos, remain difficult to answer.

As it stands, Congress last year prohibited the Food and Drug Administration from considering applications for research in this area, but in December the U.K.’s Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority agreed to let clinics apply to try the procedure on a case-by-case basis. In March, it granted a license to carry out the first procedure to Doug Turnbull, director of the Wellcome Trust Center for Mitochondrial Research at Newcastle University.

“We’re going to look to those in Britain,” Botkin says, “to do careful trials and help us better understand how this technique works.”

In broadest terms, Zhang and his colleagues lifted the nucleus out of the egg of the original mother, leaving behind most — though not all — of her defective mitochondria, which would have led to the almost certain development of Leigh syndrome in the fetus. They then placed that nucleus inside a healthy donor woman’s egg, whose own nucleus had been removed. The result was a hybrid egg with the original mother’s nuclear genes and the donor mother’s cytoplasm and mitochondria. The hybrid egg was fertilized by the father’s sperm and implanted in the birth mother.

The technique could potentially prevent a wide range of mitochondrial diseases, ranging from hereditary blindness to progressive muscle wasting.

A key problem, however, is that not all of the defective mitochondria can be eliminated. The boy, Zhang reports in the new paper, currently carries between 2.36 and 9.23 percent of potentially defective DNA, according to sampling of his urine, hair follicles and circumcised foreskin.

“That’s not surprising,” says Doug Wallace, head of the Center for Mitochondrial and Epigenomic Medicine at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, who was not involved in the study. “As far as I know, very few cases have been found where there is absolutely no carryover of mitochondria from the donor nucleus.”

Even at a 9 percent load of defective DNA, Wallace said, most people with Leigh Syndrome will appear normal. He added that while it is unlikely, levels could be higher in the boy’s other tissues, such as the brain or heart.

Zhang and his team report that physical examination of the boy has included detailed neurological investigation at regular waypoints, including at two weeks, four weeks, two months, three months and four months. All have proved normal, Zhang said, and the boy is still under close monitoring with “a long-term follow-up plan.”

Just what such a long-term plan might look like, however, is uncertain — particularly given that the parents have publicly said that they do not plan to have the boy regularly tested throughout his life to monitor levels of the errant DNA. University of California molecular biologist Patrick O’Farrell, who was not involved in the Zhang study, suggested that this was worrying, given that there could a rising load of mutations as the boy ages.

In this case, a total five eggs underwent the transfer and were fertilized, Zhang and his team reported. The embryo that was ultimately implanted carried about a 5 percent load of the defective DNA, but the researchers did not examine how much defective DNA was carried over in the embryos that were not used.

The remaining fertilized eggs are still available, says Zhang, but he has not tested them to see how much defective DNA each contains. Should the parents decide they’d like to have another baby, Zhang said he would test the others.

Still, without readily accessible data on the transfer of defective DNA in all of the fertilized eggs, O’Farrell argues that important insights are being overlooked. A three-parent baby, he said, offers the rare chance to study the “segregation and transmission of mitochondrial genomes.”

In a telephone interview, Zhang emphasized that analyses are ongoing. “This is new ground, so there are many questions to ask and more studies to come,” Zhang said. “With new tests in new studies, we will continue to learn more.”

For all of the lingering questions, Zhang’s groundbreaking research has sparked a flurry of similar research elsewhere. The editors of the journal carrying his new report credit Zhang with helping to nudge “cautious use” of mitochondrial replacement therapy in the U.K. Meanwhile, the fertility specialist Valery Zukin has used the three-parent technique in the Ukraine to help two infertile women who suffer from a syndrome known as embryo arrest, where their fertilized eggs stop growing before they can be implanted in the uterus.

Both women gave birth to apparently healthy babies this year.

Such news will surely be welcomed by desperate parents looking for new ways to conceive, but experts like O’Farrell continue to worry that the procedure is being deployed too quickly, and with too many question unanswered.

“I feel like extending this work into infertility cases is dangerous,” O’Farrell says. “For every gene that compromises fertility, we need to know whether it also is going to affect later aspects of development.

“If you only rescue fertility,” he adds, “the other defects that gene might cause will still be there.”

Jill Neimark is an award-winning science journalist and an author of adult and children’s books. Her most recent book is The Hugging Tree: A Story About Resilience.

A version of this articleoriginally appeared at Undark, a digital science magazine published by the Knight Science Journalism Fellowship Program at MIT.

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