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June 2, 2026 11.00 AM EST
Pulmonary Fibrosis is a complex disease. There are many molecular pathways involved in understanding this complexity. Join the next CytoSolve® Symposium to learn more about Pulmonary Fibrosis.
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CytoSolve® BreaThe™ Support Lung Health
This proprietary blend of wild-crafted herbs sourced from India honors East and West to Support Lung Health.
Innovative Companies Choose CytoSolve® to Build Real ProductsThat Deliver Real Health Juice Plus+® used CytoSolve® to advance their research and development to discover the molecular science of why 138 molecules in their product from fruits and vegetables attenuates low-grade chronic inflammation.
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Recent CytoSolve® Patents
CytoSolve® has recently been awarded patents by the United States Patent and Trademark Office for its innovative work in Joint Health, Antioxidant Protection, Low Grade Inflammation, and Men’s Health.
US Patent for Anti-oxidant Formulation ![]() Joint Health Formulation Patent
Schedule an appointment if you would like to learn how to innovate new products or license CytoSolve’s US patents. Recent CytoSolve® Eye Health Symposium
Watch below if you missed it.
CytoSolve® Open Science Institute™ is providing a new paradigm for finding solutions to address Eye Health. Here are the results from our latest symposium on Eye Health.
For those of you who missed it, click below to watch the entire Symposium
CytoSolve® Detoxit™ Improves Eye Health This proprietary blend of wild-crafted herbs sourced from India honors East and West to Improves Eye Health.
mV25™ for Joint Health Listen to how mV25™ created by CytoSolve® helped Sandy, a Master Tae Kwon Do instructor, helped overcome her knee injury.
Previous CytoSolve® Symposia
Recent CytoSolve® Peer – Reviewed Publications
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Agricultural Sciences, 2015, 6, 630-662 © 2015 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.
DOI: 10.4236/as.2015.67062
Abstract:
Safety assessment of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) is a contentious topic. Proponents of GMOs assert that GMOs are safe since the FDA’s policy of substantial equivalence considers GMOs “equivalent” to their non-GMO counterparts, and argue that genetic modification (GM) is simply an extension of a “natural” process of plant breeding, a form of “genetic modification”, though done over longer time scales. Anti-GMO activists counter that GMOs are unsafe since substantial equivalence is unscientific and outdated since it originates in the 1970s to assess safety of medical devices, which are not comparable to the complexity of biological systems, and contend that targeted GM is not plant breeding. The heart of the debate appears to be on the methodology used to determine criteria for substantial equivalence. Systems biology, which aims to understand complexity of the whole organism, as a system, rather than just studying its parts in a reductionist manner, may provide a framework to determine appropriate criteria, as it recognizes that GM, small or large, may affect emergent properties of the whole system. Herein, a promising computational systems biology method couples known perturbations on five biomolecules caused by the CP4 EPSPS GM of Glycine max L. (soybean), with an integrative model of C1 metabolism and oxidative stress (two molecular systems critical to plant function). The results predict significant accumulation of formaldehyde and concomitant depletion of glutathione in the GMO, suggesting how a “small” and single GM creates “large” and systemic perturbations to molecular systems equilibria. Regulatory agencies, currently reviewing rules for GMO safety, may wish to adopt a systems biology approach using a combination of in silico, computational methods used herein, and subsequent targeted experimental in vitro and in vivo designs, to develop a systems understanding of “equivalence” using biomarkers, such as formaldehyde and glutathione, which predict metabolic disruptions, towards modernizing the safety assessment of GMOs.
































