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#cancer-research
fromNature
2 days ago
Cancer

Why some cancer-fighting immune cells lose their strength inside tumours

Mitochondrial health in dendritic cells is crucial for effective immune response against tumors, potentially enhancing cancer immunotherapy effectiveness.
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago
Medicine

The very long road from a cancer cure' in mice to one in humans

Promising mouse cancer cures often fail to become safe, effective human drugs; premature media claims can create false patient expectations and hinder responsible research progress.
Cancer
fromNature
2 days ago

Why some cancer-fighting immune cells lose their strength inside tumours

Mitochondrial health in dendritic cells is crucial for effective immune response against tumors, potentially enhancing cancer immunotherapy effectiveness.
Data science
fromMedium
2 days ago

In-Silico Perturbation Meets Single-Cell Foundation Models: From Zero-Shot Potential to Fine-Tuned...

In-silico perturbation simulates cellular state changes, but biological trustworthiness remains a challenge despite advancements in single-cell foundation models.
Medicine
fromNews Center
5 days ago

Study Identifies New Molecular Mechanisms Supporting Cell Adhesion - News Center

New intracellular mechanisms promoting cell-cell adhesion have been uncovered, revealing distinct roles of delta-catenins in adherens junction differentiation.
fromNature
1 week ago

Can a mouse be cloned indefinitely? Decades-long experiment has answers

Asexual reproduction is ultimately unsustainable for mice, and potentially other mammals, too. The clones looked normal and lived as long as normal mice. But large mutations - including the loss of an entire chromosome - accumulated in the cloned lineage at an unusually high rate.
OMG science
Science
fromNature
2 weeks ago

Synthetic circuits for cell ratio control - Nature

Synthetic biology enables artificial cell differentiation and division of labor by engineering genetic and epigenetic circuits that mimic natural stem cell asymmetric division processes.
#car-t-cell-therapy
Medicine
fromNature
2 weeks ago

Masked mitochondria slip into cells to treat disease in mice

Red blood cell membranes can cloak transplanted mitochondria, allowing them to evade immune destruction and successfully treat mitochondrial diseases in mice.
Higher education
fromCornell Chronicle
3 weeks ago

Stem-cell registry drive will mobilize campus to save lives | Cornell Chronicle

Cornell is hosting a stem-cell donor campaign March 13-20 to recruit 10,000 participants aged 18-35 for the national registry, addressing critical shortages of Black and Latino donors needed for patients like Max Uribe.
Science
fromNature
3 weeks ago

From cancer to Alzheimer's: could a renewed focus on energy transform biomedicine?

Energy flow, governed by universal physics principles, provides a more fundamental understanding of biological processes and disease than molecular mechanisms alone.
Cancer
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Bacteria Engineered to Eat Tumors From the Inside

Researchers engineered Clostridium sporogenes bacteria to consume tumor cells from inside, offering a potential alternative to traditional cancer treatments.
Medicine
fromNews Center
1 month ago

Trashing Cancer's 'Undruggable' Proteins - News Center

Northwestern scientists developed protein-like polymers that direct cancer-driving proteins to cellular degradation machinery, causing cancer cell death and tumor growth inhibition.
Science
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Lab-Grown Brains Growing More Powerful

Lab-grown brain organoids can now process information in real time and solve complex engineering problems, marking a major advancement in neuroscience research.
fromNature
1 month ago

Daily briefing: Stem-cell treatment strengthens people with age-related frailty

Researchers administered one of four doses of stem cells to 118 people between 70 and 85 years old, all of whom had frailty. In a timed walking test nine months after treatment, those who had received the highest dose could walk about 60 metres farther, on average, than they could before treatment.
Science
Cancer
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Douglas Hanahan, biologist: We don't necessarily need a cure, what we really need is cancer without disease'

Cancer cells acquire hallmarks: uncontrolled proliferation, evasion of growth barriers, resistance to programmed death, and relative immortality, driving tumor diversity and treatment variability.
OMG science
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

Why did that cancer cell become drug-resistant? - Harvard Gazette

TimeVault records and stores cellular gene-expression history inside living cells, enabling retrieval of past gene-activity information to study differentiation, stress responses, adaptation, and drug resistance.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

Cancer Survival Rates Are the Highest They've Been since the 1970s

On Tuesday the American Cancer Society (ACS) released its annual report on cancer statistics in the U.S., and it offered a rare bit of good news: the proportion of people who were alive at least five years after a cancer diagnosis hit a record high. The report found that, among all cancer patients diagnosed between 2015 and 2021 in the U.S., the survival rate at the five-year mark relative to those who didn't have cancer was 70 percent.
Public health
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Cancer might evade immune defences by stealing mitochondria

Cancer cells acquire mitochondria from immune cells to weaken those immune cells and activate type I interferon signaling that promotes lymph-node invasion.
fromNature
2 months ago

Microbiota-induced T cell plasticity enables immune-mediated tumour control - Nature

Although specific bacterial taxa have been associated with favourable clinical responses to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) in cancer patients12,13,18,19,20,21,22, the mechanisms by which the intestinal microbiota influences anti-tumour immune responses remain poorly defined. Products of the microbiota, including metabolites23,24,25 and innate receptor ligands26, may reprogramme myeloid cells27, lowering the activation threshold for antigen presentation and thereby facilitating priming and activation of tumour-reactive T cells.
Cancer
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Daily briefing: Cancer cells stay hidden using stolen mitochondria

Cancer cells acquire immune-cell mitochondria that activate a mitochondrial pathway enabling immune evasion and lymph-node invasion.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Lung cancer hijacks the brain to trick the immune system

For years, scientists have viewed cancer as a localized glitch in which cells refuse to stop dividing. But a new study suggests that, in certain organs, tumors actively communicate with the brain to trick it into protecting them. Scientists have long known that nerves grow into some tumors and that tumors containing lots of nerves usually lead to a worse prognosis.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Daily briefing: The human cells in our bodies that aren't genetically ours

A virus that sickens marine mammals has been detected in Arctic waters for the first time. Scientists used drones armed with petri dishes to collect samples of blow - the air and mucus whales expel from their blowholes - from whales in northern Norway. The team identified cetacean morbillivirus in samples from humpback whales ( Megaptera novaeangliae) and one sperm whale ( Physeter macrocephalus), though the humpbacks showed no symptoms of disease.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
1 month ago

Author Correction: The genomic landscape of response to EGFR blockade in colorectal cancer

In Extended Data Fig. 8 of this article, a micrograph shown in the left column (panel AZD) was inadvertently duplicated during figure preparation. The intended image was meant to show phospho-ERK (P-ERK) levels in a MAP2K1-mutant patient-derived xenograft (PDX) exposed to the MEK inhibitor AZD6244 (AZD). However, this image was accidentally overlaid with a micrograph from Extended Data Fig. 10 (left column, panel PAN), which displays P-ERK levels in an EGFR-mutant PDX exposed to panitumumab (PAN).
fromNature
2 months ago

Why cancer can come back years later - and how to stop it

When Lisa Dutton was declared free of breast cancer in 2017, she took a moment to celebrate with family and friends, even though she knew her cancer journey might not be over. As many as one-third of people whose breast tumours are cleared see the disease come back, sometimes decades later. Many other cancers are known to recur in the years following an initial treatment, some at much higher rates.
Medicine
Science
fromScienceDaily
2 months ago

Vitamin A may be helping cancer hide from the immune system

Retinoic acid signaling in cancer cells and dendritic cells suppresses anti-tumor immunity, and blocking this pathway restores vaccine effectiveness.
Medicine
fromNature
2 months ago

Putting immune cells into 'night mode' reduces heart-attack damage

Limiting neutrophil activity with drugs can reduce heart-attack severity while preserving overall immune function.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
1 month ago

Editorial Expression of Concern: Transcription-independent ARF regulation in oncogenic stress-mediated p53 responses

Western blot bands in Figs. 1e, 3g, and 4c show apparent duplication; original data unavailable; affected results should be interpreted with caution.
Medicine
fromNews Center
2 months ago

How Inflammation Fuels Blood Cancer Risk - News Center

TP53-mutant hematopoietic stem cells gain advantage under chronic inflammation via NLRP1 inflammasome activation and altered RNA processing, driving clonal expansion and leukemia risk.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Temporal tissue dynamics from a spatial snapshot - Nature

Cell population dynamics drive physiological and pathological processes, but human in vivo measurement is limited, requiring new single-cell approaches to infer temporal changes.
Medicine
fromNature
2 months ago

Daily briefing: Why cancer might protect against Alzheimer's disease

Cystatin C from cancer cells can enter the brain and promote immune-mediated degradation of Alzheimer's disease plaques.
fromNature
1 month ago

Daily briefing: Tumours use neurons as hotline to the brain

Tumours lure and then hijack nearby sensory neurons to boost their own growth. The cancer cells use these neurons to send a signal to the brain that subdues the activity of immune cells around the tumour, which allows it to grow unchecked. When researchers deactivated these neurons in mice with lung cancer, they saw "a huge, dramatic reduction" in tumour growth - more than 50% - says cancer immunologist and study co-author Chengcheng Jin.
Science
fromIndependent
1 month ago

Everyone's talking about: Stem cell beauty treatments - what do they involve and do they work?

'Stem cell-based' treatments and just the latest aesthetic treatment marketed to those seeking to maintain or obtain youthful skin, but what exactly is involved and what's the evidence that they work It's hard to keep track of the number of scientifically based beauty treatments on offer these days. Most are aimed at middle-aged females with disposable incomes, who are willing to splash large amounts of money on their skin to counter the effects of time.
Medicine
fromNews Center
1 month ago

Targeting Cellular Mechanisms May Improve Immune Response in Chronic Infections - News Center

During viral infection and in the case of cancer, CD4+ helper T-cells release cytokines, or small signaling proteins, that activate and "give permission" to other immune cells to control and clear viral pathogens. In certain viral infections, such as lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV), which is spread by infected rodents, CD4+ T-cells differentiate into different subpopulations, including one subset of progenitor CD4+ T-cells that replenish type 1 helper (Th1) and follicular helper (Tfh) T-cells.
Science
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

How ageing harms the body's response to raging infection

Some genes that protect against infection in young mice increase mortality in old mice by altering organ-specific immune endurance.
Science
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

Science says this one habit can your body almost a decade younger at a cellular level - Silicon Canals

Consistent vigorous exercise can make cells up to nine biological years younger by preserving telomeres and stimulating telomerase, slowing cellular aging.
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

A 'time capsule for cells' stores the secret experiences of their past

Engineered TimeVaults capture and store cellular mRNA to continuously record past transcriptional activity, enabling retrospective study of cellular history and responses.
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

Now is not the time to defund human fetal tissue research

Restricting federal funding for human fetal tissue research will impede development of replacement technologies and slow discovery of new medicines.
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