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BioWorld - Saturday, March 21, 2026
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Vial and syringe with DNA
Ocular

ASGCT: ‘From darkness to light’ in ocular gene therapy

May 14, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
From glaucoma to Stargardt disease, age-related macular degeneration (AMD) to retinitis pigmentosa, or a corneal transplant to Bietti’s crystalline dystrophy, the 27th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy (ASGCT) is working to bring some light to patients with age and congenital diseases that affect vision. From May 7-11, 2024, thousands of scientists are gathering in Baltimore to show their advances against the challenges of delivering genes and cells to the correct place, avoiding immunogenicity and improving diseases.
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Vial and syringe with DNA
Ocular

ASGCT: ‘From darkness to light’ in ocular gene therapy

May 10, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
From glaucoma to Stargardt disease, age-related macular degeneration (AMD) to retinitis pigmentosa, or a corneal transplant to Bietti’s crystalline dystrophy, the 27th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy (ASGCT) is working to bring some light to patients with age and congenital diseases that affect vision. From May 7-11, 2024, thousands of scientists are gathering in Baltimore to show their advances against the challenges of delivering genes and cells to the correct place, avoiding immunogenicity and improving diseases.
Read More
Concept art for prenatal genetic testing and whole genome sequencing.
Genetic/congenital

ASGCT: In utero interventions can prevent organ damage after birth

May 9, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
“Prenatal therapies are the next disruptive technologies in health care, which will advance and shape the future of patient care in the 21st century,” said Graça Almeida-Porada, a professor at the Fetal Research and Therapy Center of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. At the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy (ASGCT) annual meeting in Baltimore on May 5, 2024, Almeida-Porada introduced the first presentation of the scientific symposium “Prospects for Prenatal Gene and Cell Therapy.”
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CAR T cells attacking cancer cell

Stanford, Penn studies: Secondary cancer risk from CAR Ts rare

May 7, 2024
By Karen Carey
Despite what University of Pennsylvania (Penn) immunotherapy pioneer Carl June referred to as a “cold slap last November” – a launched investigation by the U.S. FDA into a possible link between CAR T-cell immunotherapies and secondary cancers – new unpublished studies by Penn and Stanford University highlight the rarity of such cases.
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Colorful illustration of the heart
Cardiovascular

Human iPSCs restore muscle, function in monkeys with heart failure

May 7, 2024
By Tamra Sami
Japanese researchers have transplanted human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) in a primate model of myocardial infarction and were able to restore heart muscle and function in monkeys. Developed by Tokyo-based Heartseed Inc., the grafted iPSCs consist of clusters of purified heart muscle cells (cardiomyocyte spheroids) that are injected into the myocardial layer of the heart. Published in Circulation on April 26, 2024, the study showed that the cardiomyocyte spheroids survived long term and showed improved contractile function with low occurrence of post-transplant arrhythmias.
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Blood cell, test tubes, dropper

Gut microbe enzymes can produce universal donor blood cells

May 3, 2024
By Nuala Moran
Researchers have identified enzymes in gut microorganisms that could cleave A and B antigens from red blood, transmuting them to O negative cells.
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Colorful illustration of the heart
Cardiovascular

Human iPSCs restore muscle, function in monkeys with heart failure

May 3, 2024
By Tamra Sami
Japanese researchers have transplanted human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) in a primate model of myocardial infarction and were able to restore heart muscle and function in monkeys. Developed by Tokyo-based Heartseed Inc., the grafted iPSCs consist of clusters of purified heart muscle cells (cardiomyocyte spheroids) that are injected into the myocardial layer of the heart. Published in Circulation on April 26, 2024, the study showed that the cardiomyocyte spheroids survived long term and showed improved contractile function with low occurrence of post-transplant arrhythmias.
Read More
X/Y chromosomes
Immune

X chromosome silencer contributes to female autoimmune risk

April 29, 2024
By Anette Breindl
Females have a much greater risk of developing an autoimmune disease than males do. Eighty percent of autoimmune disease patients are female, and specific disorders can have an even more lopsided ratio – 90% of systemic lupus erythematosus (lupus) and almost 95% of Sjögren’s disease patients are female.
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Lung cancer driven by the Kras oncogene shown in purple

Broader KRAS inhibition methods include chaperoning, gluing, vaccinating

April 24, 2024
By Anette Breindl
The existence of two approved therapies, Lumakras (sotorasib, Amgen Inc.) and Karzati (adagrasib, Mirati Therapeutics Inc.), has been a triumphant success against KRAS, a protein that was once considered undruggable.
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Macrophage and cancer cell
Cancer

Pancreatic cancer cells' interaction with macrophages induces cachexia

April 22, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Cross talk between macrophages and tumor cells could modulate cachexia in pancreatic cancer patients. A group of scientists from the University of Oklahoma has discovered a new pathway that promoted muscle wasting after the recruitment of this immune cell in the tumor microenvironment, activating cachexia-inducing factors.
Read More
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