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BioWorld - Sunday, February 22, 2026
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Transmission electron micrograph of HIV-1 virus particles
HIV/AIDS

IAS 2025: Cheat, parasitize, break the virus – fresh ideas fuel HIV research

July 21, 2025
By Mar de Miguel
No Comments
There is still no effective vaccine or cure for HIV. Scientists are considering options ranging from longer-term antiretroviral therapy (ART) that space out injections by several years to long-lasting pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) that acts as a vaccine while immunization is achieved. What else can be done?
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New non-opioid approach for pain: Tafalgie reports phase I data

July 21, 2025
By Nuala Moran
No Comments
After two decades of research elucidating the basic science, Tafalgie Therapeutics SA has delivered the first clinical data for its non-opioid analgesic.
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Nuclear genome being placed in an egg

Eight babies born after successful mitochondrial transfer

July 17, 2025
By Nuala Moran
No Comments
Scientists at Newcastle University U.K., have reported the births of eight healthy babies following mitochondrial transfer, in which the fertilized egg of a woman carrying mutations in their mitochondrial DNA was placed in the enucleated egg of a non-carrier.
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Carotid ultrasound
Aging

UK Biobank project complete, supports research with 100,000 scans

July 17, 2025
By Nuala Moran
No Comments
After a 10-year project and a £60 million (US$80 million) investment, the UK Biobank has completed the whole body scans of 100,000 volunteers and is making the 1 billion images available for researchers worldwide.
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Carotid ultrasound

UK Biobank project complete, supports research with 100,000 scans

July 16, 2025
By Nuala Moran
No Comments
After a 10-year project and a £60 million (US$80 million) investment, the UK Biobank has completed the whole body scans of 100,000 volunteers and is making the 1 billion images available for researchers worldwide.
Read More
Transmission electron micrograph of HIV-1 virus particles
HIV/AIDS

IAS 2025: All eyes still on the HIV reservoir

July 16, 2025
By Mar de Miguel
No Comments
While people living with HIV can lead virtually normal lives thanks to antiretroviral therapy (ART), HIV persists in a latent state within cellular reservoirs that scientists do not know how to eliminate. “Transcription is a critical step in the viral life cycle. … But there are currently no drugs suppressing HIV transcription, and that may be one of the reasons why current antiretroviral therapy is not curative,” Melanie Ott told the audience at the 13th IAS Conference on HIV Science this week in Kigali, Rwanda.
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Brain and neural networks
Biomarkers

Proteomics finds surprise commonalities as well as differences in neurodegenerative diseases

July 15, 2025
By Nuala Moran
No Comments
The switch will be flicked today to make the world’s largest dementia-related proteomics dataset freely available to researchers, at the same time as members of the consortium which compiled it publish the proteomics signatures of major neurodegenerative diseases that they uncovered in a first trawl of the data.
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Computer programming cards with numbers punched

At Glia 2025, searching for memories in the matrix

July 11, 2025
By Anette Breindl
No Comments
At first blush, the brain’s extracellular matrix (ECM) seems like the opposite of synaptic plasticity. Plasticity is the ability to change; the ECM is stable, to the point that it is often described as a scaffold – something to lend stability. “ECM proteins have some of the longest lifetimes of any protein in the brain,” Anna Molofsky told her audience at the XVII Meeting on Glial Cells in Health and Disease, which is being held in Marseille this week.
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Rare disease illustration

UK industry encourages renewal of rare disease framework

July 8, 2025
By Nuala Moran
No Comments
Representatives of patients’ groups, industry bodies and venture philanthropy funders are calling for a renewal of the U.K. Rare Diseases Framework, to put fresh momentum behind translational research and clinical trials, streamline regulatory oversight and improve access to therapies.
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Aldh1a2 in rabbits vs. mice

Turn on vitamin A pathway and regenerate an ear

July 8, 2025
By Mar de Miguel
No Comments
Lizards, zebrafish, salamanders and tritons can regrow a tail, a fin, or even an entire limb after amputation. Cut a planarian into pieces, and you will end up with a bunch of them. Researchers at the National Institute of Biological Sciences in Beijing have discovered a genetic switch linked to vitamin A. After activating this pathway, they managed to regenerate the ear pinna of a mouse, an animal that previously lacked this ability.
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