BioWorld. Link to homepage.

Clarivate
  • BioWorld
  • BioWorld Science
  • BioWorld Asia
  • Data Snapshots
    • Biopharma
    • Medical technology
    • Infographics: Dynamic digital data analysis
    • Index insights
    • NME Digest
  • Special reports
    • Infographics: Dynamic digital data analysis
    • Ebola outbreak
    • Hantavirus
    • Trump administration impacts
    • Med-tech outlook 2026
    • Under threat: mRNA vaccine research
    • BioWorld at 35
    • Biopharma M&A scorecard
    • Bioworld 2025 review
    • BioWorld MedTech 2025 review
    • BioWorld Science 2025 review
    • Women's health
    • China's GLP-1 landscape
    • PFA re-energizes afib market
    • China CAR T
    • Alzheimer's disease
    • Coronavirus
    • More reports can be found here

BioWorld. Link to homepage.

  • Sign In
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
Subscribe
BioWorld - Thursday, June 11, 2026
Home » Topics » Science, BioWorld Science

Science, BioWorld Science
Science, BioWorld Science RSS Feed RSS

Mitochondria long way from the nucleus and in need of closer sources of proteins
Neurology/Psychiatric

Neuroscience 2022: ‘Strawberries’, ‘cabbages,’ fats in neuronal mitochondria

Nov. 15, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
Neurons are specialized cells with a high metabolic demand to fulfill their function, survive or keep a healthy half-life. In this sense, the anabolism and catabolism of proteins and lipids could be associated to different neurodegenerative diseases. At the 2022 annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, scientists reported the latest discoveries on neuron metabolic needs at a session on 'Powering Thoughts: The Regulation of Neuronal Energy Metabolism and Mitochondria.'
Read More
The Combat of Rama and Ravana.
Cancer

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

Oct. 27, 2022
By Anette Breindl and Mar de Miguel
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. For Vivek Subbiah, associate professor at the Department of Investigational Cancer Therapeutics, Division of Cancer Medicine of the MD Anderson Cancer Center, the story of how Rama defeated Ravana has parallels in drug discovery. Ravana had 10 heads, and when one was cut off, it grew back. Rama defeated Ravana by means of a magic arrow that entered through the demon’s navel.
Read More
Brain waves
ECNP 2022

ECNP 2022: Epilepsy is much more than seizures, studies suggest

Oct. 17, 2022
By Anette Breindl
“Epilepsy is really a classical neurological disorder,” Lars Pinborg told the audience at the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP) annual conference on Sunday. “Or is it?” Pinborg, of Rigshospitalet's The Neuroscience Center in Denmark, was chairing a session dedicated to an alternative hypothesis, summed up in the session title: “Is epilepsy a psychiatric disorder?”
Read More
Worms in a petri dish.
Biomarkers

Aging biomarkers may not generalize to lifespan

Oct. 7, 2022
By Anette Breindl
By independently manipulating the lifespan of worms and one of its purported biomarkers, namely, the cessation of vigorous movement (CVM), investigators at the Center for Genomic Regulation (CRG) in Barcelona have demonstrated that the two are driven by partly independent processes.
Read More
Concept illustration of click chemistry.
Drug Design, Drug Delivery & Technologies

Promoting attachments nets 2022’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Oct. 5, 2022
By Anette Breindl and Mar de Miguel
The 2022 Nobel Prize in chemistry was awarded to Carolyn Bertozzi of Stanford University, to Morten Meldal of the University of Copenhagen, and – for the second time – to Barry Sharpless of The Scripps Research Institute “for the development of click chemistry and bioorthogonal chemistry.”

Click chemistry, the Nobel Committee’s Olof Ramström told reporters while announcing the prize, “is almost like it sounds – it’s all about linking different molecules.”

He likened click chemistry to a seatbelt buckle, whose interlocking parts can be attached to many different materials, linking them by snapping the two parts of the buckle together.

“The problem was to find good chemical buckles,” Ramström said – chemicals that “will easily snap together, and importantly, they won’t snap with anything else.”
Read More
Illustration of world map, DNA.
Biomarkers

Current TMB estimation methods fall short in minority populations

Oct. 4, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
Tumor mutational burden (TMB), a biomarker used to assess whether a patient will respond to immunotherapy, needs to be recalculated in order to be useful for patients of Asian or African descent. Scientists at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute found a significant bias in the estimated TMB values affecting these populations and adjusted them for those patients.
Read More
Svante Pääbo with skull
Genetic/Congenital

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

Oct. 3, 2022
By Anette Breindl and Mar de Miguel
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.
Read More
Illustration of scientist cutting DNA with scissors.
Drug Design, Drug Delivery & Technologies

CRISPR activation mouse model can turn on previously silenced genes

Sep. 28, 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.
Read More
Bears at the WSU Bear Center.
Endocrine/Metabolic

Research identifies proteins that let sleeping bears lie

Sep. 22, 2022
By Anette Breindl
Investigators at Washington State University (WSU) have identified a set of eight proteins that were expressed in the serum of Ursus arctos horribilis, better known as the grizzly bear, specifically during their hibernation period. In addition to reporting new basic insights into hibernation, the study, which was published in the Sept. 21, 2022, issue of iScience, could also give clues to insulin resistance and its relationship to body fat.
Read More
Illustration of brain between man and woman
Cancer

Sex differences in brain tumor metabolism suggest the need to adapt treatments

Sep. 16, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
Sex differences at the cellular level could explain why men respond less well to glioblastoma (GBM) treatments, according to a study led by the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis (WUSTL). The researchers found that male and female GBM tumor cells had different metabolic needs. GBM cells from male surgical samples absorbed more glutamine and had different nutritional preferences for amino acids.
Read More
Previous 1 2 … 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Next

Popular Stories

  • Today's news in brief

    BioWorld
    BioWorld briefs for June 10, 2026.
  • News in brief

    BioWorld Asia
    BioWorld Asia briefs for June 9, 2026
  • 3D rendering of β2-Adrenergic receptor GPCR protein molecule embedded in lipid bilayer membrane.

    Skape Bio unlocks GPCR targets with de novo-designed miniproteins

    BioWorld
    Modulating G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) is one of the major challenges in biomedicine. These are flexible proteins with small, deep binding pockets. The...
  • Wuxi Apptec signage

    Wuxi Apptec insists it’s ‘not a Chinese military company’

    BioWorld
    Wuxi Apptec isn’t going down without a fight after the U.S. Department of Defense added it to the Section 1260H list June 8 as a designated “Chinese military...
  • Antares Therapeutics divulges new CDK2/cyclin E1 inhibitors

    BioWorld Science
    Antares Therapeutics Inc. has reported new CDK2/cyclin E1 inhibitors potentially useful for the treatment of cancer.
  • BioWorld
    • Today's news
    • Analysis and data insight
    • Clinical
    • Data Snapshots
    • Deals and M&A
    • Financings
    • Medical technology
    • Newco news
    • Opinion
    • Regulatory
  • BioWorld Science
    • Today's news
    • Biomarkers
    • Cancer
    • Conferences
    • Endocrine/metabolic
    • Immune
    • Infection
    • Neurology/psychiatric
    • NME Digest
    • Patents
  • BioWorld Asia
    • Today's news
    • Analysis and data insight
    • Australia
    • China
    • Clinical
    • Deals and M&A
    • Financings
    • Newco news
    • Regulatory
    • Science
  • More
    • About
    • Advertise with BioWorld
    • Archives
    • Article reprints and permissions
    • Contact us
    • Cookie policy
    • Copyright notice
    • Data methodology
    • Infographics: Dynamic digital data analysis
    • Index insights
    • Podcasts
    • Privacy policy
    • Share your news with BioWorld
    • Staff
    • Terms of use
    • Topic alerts
Follow Us

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved. Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing