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BioWorld - Saturday, June 14, 2025
Home » Authors » Anette Breindl

Anette Breindl

Articles

ARTICLES

Photomicrograph of bone marrow aspirate showing myeloblasts of acute myeloid leukemia

At EHA 2025, ways to bring immune therapy to AML

June 13, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
“The lack of therapeutic precision in treatment of myeloid malignancies is in sharp contrast with the fact that myeloid cancers represent the perhaps best characterized cancers of all at the cellular, molecular, and genetic levels,” Johanna Olweus told her audience at the Friday plenary session of the European Hematology Association 2025 Annual Congress.
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Image of clock over dna strands
Aging

Insights into ‘intrinsic capacity’ could aid antiaging drug discovery

June 12, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
Researchers at the Buck Institute for Research on Aging have developed an epigenetic clock that could predict an individual’s intrinsic capacity score, a composite score that is a measure of healthy aging. The clock, which has only limited overlap with other epigenetic clocks, could be “a surrogate for aging that can be used for clinical trials,” senior author David Furman told BioWorld. And even more basically, it could help address a basic conundrum: that aging is the major risk factor for most causes of death, but not itself a disease.
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Digital rendering of molecular structures
Drug design, drug delivery & technologies

Open-source AI model can predict small-molecule binding affinity

June 10, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Recursion Pharmaceuticals Inc. have released an open-source AI model that can predict the binding strength of small molecules as well as structures of proteins and biomolecular complexes. The model, which is called Boltz-2 and was released by the research team on the developer platform Github on June 6, addresses a major bottleneck in drug discovery with its improved ability to predict binding strengths.
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Digital rendering of molecular structures

Open-source AI model can predict small-molecule binding affinity

June 9, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Recursion Pharmaceuticals Inc. have released an open-source AI model that can predict the binding strength of small molecules as well as structures of proteins and biomolecular complexes. The model, which is called Boltz-2 and was released by the research team on the developer platform Github on June 6, addresses a major bottleneck in drug discovery with its improved ability to predict binding strengths.
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Liver
Gastrointestinal

Precision medicine approach identifies culprit in alcohol-associated hepatitis

May 29, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
Researchers have identified KpsM as a virulence factor in Escherichia coli that was responsible for liver damage in alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH). A small-molecule inhibitor of KpsM reduced liver damage in animal models of AH.
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Sickle cell illustration
Cancer

Study probes link between sickle cell disease and kidney cancer

May 26, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
Individuals with both sickle cell disease (SCD) and sickle cell trait are at higher risk than others of developing renal medullary cancer (RMC), the rarest and deadliest subtype of kidney cancer. Researchers at MD Anderson Cancer Center have identified the molecular mechanisms behind the increased risk, gaining new insights into antitumor immunity more generally and, potentially, new ways to treat RMC, and possibly other tumors as well.

SCD “has been studied for 30 years, but 95% of the effort [has been] working on the red blood cells … how red blood cells contribute to hypoxia and then reduce oxygen supply,” Chunru Lin told BioWorld.
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Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
ASGCT 2025

First bespoke gene editing therapy treats rare metabolic disease

May 20, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
Using a customized gene editing therapy, researchers at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia have reported success in treating an infant with a severe metabolic disorder. Kiran Musunuru, Barry J. Gertz Professor for Translational Research in the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, presented the case at the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy’s 2025 annual meeting. The case study was simultaneously published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
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Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
ASGCT 2025

First bespoke gene editing therapy treats rare metabolic disease

May 15, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
Using a customized gene editing therapy, researchers at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia have reported success in treating an infant with a severe metabolic disorder. Kiran Musunuru, Barry J. Gertz Professor for Translational Research in the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, presented the case at the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy’s 2025 annual meeting. The case study was simultaneously published in The New England Journal of Medicine.
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Liver illustration
Endocrine/metabolic

Liver is also immune organ, influenced by microbiome

May 14, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
Immunity is not a function most people particularly associate with the liver. But because of its connection to the gut, the liver is exposed to bacterial metabolites as few other organs are. And when either the liver or the gut is not functioning well, it can adversely affect immunity as well.
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Liver illustration
Endocrine/metabolic

Liver is also immune organ, influenced by microbiome

May 12, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
Immunity is not a function most people particularly associate with the liver. But because of its connection to the gut, the liver is exposed to bacterial metabolites as few other organs are. And when either the liver or the gut is not functioning well, it can adversely affect immunity as well. The liver is connected to the gut via both the biliary system and the portal vein. Those two conduits allow metabolites from the gut microbiome to influence what’s going on in the liver. Both liver and gut damage can affect this communication for the worse. And surprisingly, one of the consequences is immune dysfunction.
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