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BioWorld - Friday, March 6, 2026
Home » Topics » Science

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PET imaging of RELN-COLBOS (H3447R) carrier brain showing limited aggregation of tau
Neurology/Psychiatric

Reelin’ in druggable protective pathways with second Alzheimer’s ‘escapee’

May 15, 2023
By Anette Breindl
Investigators have identified a second individual who remained cognitively normal into his late 60s despite having the PSEN1 E280A mutation, which causes a familial version of early-onset Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The likely source of protection, a mutation in a gene called Reelin, is distinct from the protective mechanism identified in the first case of an individual who was protected from the effects of PSEN1 E280A. That case was reported in 2019.
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Illustration showing pangenome graph
Genetic/Congenital

Pangenome gives more panoramic view of human diversity

May 10, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
The human genome, the sequence that represents the DNA of our species, was built with a single individual as a model. This all-in-one standard didn’t include the gene variations that make us different or explain why some people develop certain diseases. Four simultaneous studies from the Human Pangenome Reference Consortium have published a sequence based on 47 individuals, beginning to capture the genetic diversity that defines humans.
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COVID-19 mRNA vaccine vials, syringe
Cardiovascular

COVID vaccine myocarditis is due to inflammation

May 9, 2023
By Anette Breindl
By analyzing a cohort of adolescents that developed myocarditis or pericarditis after vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 vaccination, researchers from Yale University School of Medicine were able to pinpoint the underlying mechanism as an overly active innate immune response to the vaccine that led to broad activation of T cells and natural killer (NK) cells. Myocarditis “has been seen in other vaccine contexts, though is most common after viral infection,” Carrie Lucas told reporters at a press conference announcing the findings.
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Illustration of animals, DNA double helix
Genetic/Congenital

In Zoonomia project, evolutionary lens hones search for functional genomic variants

May 2, 2023
By Nuala Moran
A base-by-base comparison of the genome sequences of 240 species of mammals has pinpointed sites in the human genome where mutations are likely to cause disease. The sites are all perfectly conserved across the mammalian family tree over 100 million years of evolution, indicating they underlie fundamental biological processes that do not tolerate diversity or change very well.
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Illustration of animals, DNA double helix
Genetic/Congenital

In Zoonomia project, evolutionary lens hones search for functional genomic variants

May 1, 2023
By Nuala Moran
A base-by-base comparison of the genome sequences of 240 species of mammals has pinpointed sites in the human genome where mutations are likely to cause disease. The sites are all perfectly conserved across the mammalian family tree over 100 million years of evolution, indicating they underlie fundamental biological processes that do not tolerate diversity or change very well.
Read More
Illustration of animals, DNA double helix
Genetic/Congenital

In Zoonomia project, evolutionary lens hones search for functional genomic variants

April 28, 2023
By Nuala Moran
A base-by-base comparison of the genome sequences of 240 species of mammals has pinpointed sites in the human genome where mutations are likely to cause disease. The sites are all perfectly conserved across the mammalian family tree over 100 million years of evolution, indicating they underlie fundamental biological processes that do not tolerate diversity or change very well.
Read More
3D model of a protein molecule
Genetic/Congenital

Questions arise about nonsilent effect of synonymous mutations

April 25, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
Synonymous or silent mutations do not change the sequence of the protein that they encode. With some exceptions, they do not trigger any effect. Last year, however, a study by researchers from the University of Michigan tried to refute this concept after finding that they altered the protein function. But breaking dogmas can have answers. A group of scientists from various institutions has found that this work could have a method error.
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Firefighter conducting prescribed burn
Cancer

AACR 2023: Myeloid cell biology is 'growth area' for antitumor immunity

April 19, 2023
By Anette Breindl
Antitumor immunotherapy has notched big wins, but in a small proportion of patients. And one possible explanation for why is that approved immunotherapies are not yet planting their flag on most of the battlefields where tumors and the immune system engage in combat. At the opening AACR 2023 plenary session, Ralph DeNardo celebrated the successes of the current, mostly T-cell-based approaches,  but also encouraged his colleagues to think more broadly about the antitumor immunity.
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Pancreatic desmoplasia
Cancer

AACR 2023: Thinking of heterogeneities as multiple shots on goal

April 17, 2023
By Anette Breindl
Heterogeneity, in both tumors and their microenvironment, limits the success of current cancer treatments. But it also provides opportunities. Heterogeneities “are not barriers to therapy, they are vulnerabilities to be exploited,” was how David DeNardo described his take at the 2023 annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) on Sunday.
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Gene editing illustration

Base editing rescues spinal muscular atrophy in vivo

April 10, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
The editing in human cells and in mice of the survival motor neuron 1 gene (SMN1) restored the levels of SMN protein that the mutation of the SMN2 gene produces in spinal muscular atrophy. Scientists from the Broad Institute in Boston and The Ohio State University reversed the mutation using the base editing technique.
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