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BioWorld - Friday, July 3, 2026
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Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
The year in review

2025 marks a breakthrough year for in vivo gene therapies

Dec. 30, 2025
By Mar de Miguel
No Comments
Gene editing technologies are moving forward in preclinical development with innovative strategies designed to treat diseases at their root and even reverse them. However, many approaches still struggle to reach target cells or tissues – either they fail to arrive, or their efficacy is low. In vivo therapies face numerous challenges, but despite these hurdles, 2025 has marked a year of remarkable progress.
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Illustration of CAR T cell therapy in rheumatoid arthritis
The year in review

In 2025, autoimmune work notches scientific, economic successes

Dec. 29, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
In October, the Nobel Committee awarded the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine to Shimon Sakaguchi, Mary Brunkow and Fred Ramsdell for their discoveries in the field of autoimmunity. As has become typical for the scientific Nobel Prizes, the award-winning research is by now several decades old. But the discoveries were the basis for ongoing research into how to prevent autoimmunity that notched significant wins in 2025, in both basic research and in the clinic.
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Rubber duck dressed up as a doctor
The year in review

In 2025, science’s biggest story was political

Dec. 22, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
In 2025, science saw its breakthroughs, which BioWorld will be covering as part of our end-of-the-year wrap-up. But the biggest science story of 2025 is not about any scientific advance. It is the politicized destruction of U.S. science, and the dismantling of a scientific ecosystem that has been the envy of the world since it emerged after Germany destroyed its own pre-eminence in the 1930s.
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Left: Anthony Fauci. Right: Transmission electron micrograph of HIV-1 virus particles
HIV/AIDS

HIV research is close to a cure but far from ending the pandemic

Dec. 18, 2025
By Mar de Miguel
No Comments
Advances in antiretroviral therapy (ART) now allow people living with HIV to lead normal lives with undetectable and nontransmissible levels of the virus in their blood. Yet that reality is limited to those with access to treatment. More than 40 million people worldwide live with HIV, with over a million new infections and hundreds of thousands of deaths each year, underscoring that major challenges remain.
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Illustration of transfer RNA (tRNA)

Alltrna advances tRNA-based strategy for stop codon diseases

Dec. 17, 2025
By Mar de Miguel
No Comments
Gene editing can repair mutations that prematurely halt protein synthesis, resulting in incomplete peptides that cause various diseases. However, other approaches achieve the same effect without altering the genome. Startup Alltrna Inc. has developed a strategy based on transfer RNA to bypass the premature stop codons that end early protein translation. The company already has a first clinical candidate that could treat metabolic diseases such as methylmalonemia or phenylketonuria.
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Person with chest pain after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine
Inflammatory

Research unpicks molecular mechanism of vaccine-induced cardiac inflammation

Dec. 12, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
The cardiomyositis that is a rare adverse effect of mRNA-based COVID vaccines is due to immune cell activity as a result of increased levels of the chemokines CXCL10 and interferon-γ (IFN-γ). Blocking CXCL10 and IFN-γ could prevent muscle cell damage in cell culture, and cardiomyositis in animal models. The findings, reported in the Dec. 10, 2025, issue of Science Translational Medicine, suggest a way of mitigating the risk of cardiomyositis.
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Brain and DNA

Epilepsygtx's $33M advances focal epilepsy gene therapy

Dec. 10, 2025
By Nuala Moran
No Comments
Epilepsygtx Ltd. has raised a $33 million series A to fund a phase I/IIa trial of EPY-201, a gene therapy for treating drug-resistant focal epilepsy.
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Mast cell releasing histamine during allergic response

Vaccine produces DIY Xolair-like antibody, protects against anaphylaxis

Dec. 10, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
Researchers at the Institut Pasteur have developed a vaccine that spurred the production of autoantibodies to immunoglobulin E antibodies, protecting vaccinated mice from anaphylaxis.
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Colorized transmission electron micrograph of an mpox virus particle

New recombinant strain of mpox virus identified in the UK

Dec. 9, 2025
By Nuala Moran
No Comments
The UK Health Security Agency has identified a new recombinant strain of mpox (formerly monkeypox) that contains elements of clade Ib and clade IIb of the virus, in a traveler who recently returned from Asia.
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Illustration of chromosome unraveling down to the DNA
Drug design, drug delivery & technologies

First phase of synthetic human genome project successfully completes

Dec. 5, 2025
By Nuala Moran
No Comments
The first phase of the U.K. synthetic human genome project has successfully completed, realizing key steps in chromosome synthesis. The work has demonstrated a multistep method for transfecting mouse stem cells with native human chromosomes, where they are stably maintained and can be manipulated to replace native DNA with synthetic DNA. The engineered chromosomes can then be transferred into a human cell in place of the native chromosomes.
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