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BioWorld - Sunday, June 15, 2025
Breaking News: Trump administration impacts continue to roil the life sciences sectorBreaking News: Trump administration impacts continue to roil the life sciences sectorBreaking News: Trump administration impacts continue to roil the life sciences sector
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Biocom space-panel

Biocom 2023: There’s science going on 250 miles above your head

March 7, 2023
By Brian Orelli
Performing experiments and potentially manufacturing products in space offers some unique advantages in a near-zero gravity environment. Space changes buoyancy, hydrostatic pressure and convective heat flow. Researchers are studying how those changes affect cells, but also looking to take advantage of the changes to create products in manufacturing processes that wouldn’t be possible on earth.
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Fat targeting illustration
Endocrine/Metabolic

Nanomaterial allows location-specific fat targeting

Dec. 13, 2022
By Anette Breindl
The positively charged nanoparticle polyamidoamine generation 3 (P-G3) can be specifically targeted to either visceral or subcutaneous fat, and affects both types of fat in different ways, researchers from Columbia University reported in two papers recently published.
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Neurons and amyloid plaques

Amyloid plaques recast as cause of neural network dysfunction

Dec. 6, 2022
By Anette Breindl
Researchers have identified a link between amyloid plaques and dysfunctional neuronal conduction in animal models of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Their study, which was published in the Dec. 1, 2022, issue of Nature, suggests new ways to think about AD, as well as badly needed potential alternatives to plaque removal to fight the disease.
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Scanning electron micrograph of a macrophage.
Cancer

Innate immunity can drive radiation-induced abscopal effect

Nov. 29, 2022
By Anette Breindl
A combination of radiation therapy and CD47 blockade induced an abscopal effect in animal studies even in animals that lacked T cells, researchers reported in the Nov. 21, 2022, online issue of Nature Cancer.
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The Combat of Rama and Ravana.
Cancer

ENA 2022: Mutant specific or target selective, that is the question for drug development

Nov. 1, 2022
By Mar de Miguel and Anette Breindl
Diwali, the Festival of Light, marks different events depending on where it is celebrated. In some areas of India, it marks the return of Lord Rama to his birthplace of Ayodhya after defeating the demon Ravana.
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Illustration of stomach, beneficial gut bacteria.

Gut microbiota degrade intestinal nicotine, alleviate smoking-related liver disease

Oct. 25, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
Peking University researchers in collaboration with the NIH have discovered a new biochemical pathway related to a bacterium that eliminates nicotine in the intestine. The findings could lead to new ways to improve nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in smokers.
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Illustration of scientist cutting DNA with scissors.
Drug Design, Drug Delivery & Technologies

CRISPR activation mouse model can turn on previously silenced genes

Oct. 4, 2022
By Tamra Sami
Researchers at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research (WEHI) in Melbourne, Australia, have developed a new genome editing technique than can activate any gene, including those that have been silenced, allowing new drug targets and causes of drug resistance to be explored.
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Lasker awards 2022

Laskers go for integrins, prenatal testing, COVID-19 dashboard

Oct. 4, 2022
By Anette Breindl
The 2022 Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award has been awarded to Richard Hynes, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Erkki Ruoslahti, of the Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute, and Timothy Springer, of Harvard Medical School.
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Svante Pääbo with skull
Genetic/Congenital

From ancient DNA, a Nobel Prize, and perhaps modern drug targets

Oct. 3, 2022
By Mar de Miguel and Anette Breindl
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2022 was awarded to Svante Pääbo today "for his discoveries concerning the genomes of extinct hominins and human evolution." Pääbo, who is currently the director of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and his colleagues overcame extreme technical challenges to sequence the DNA of ancient hominids – because after tens of thousands of years, there is no such thing as aging well for DNA.
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Optogenetics illustration

Researchers reprogram stem cells to uncover new genetic signatures of age-related AMD

Aug. 9, 2022
By Tamra Sami
Researchers are closer to better diagnosing and treating age-related macular degeneration (AMD) after discovering new genetic signatures of the disease by reprogramming stem cells to generate high-resolution disease models.
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