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BioWorld - Thursday, June 18, 2026
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Science-James-Naismith-9-22

Inhaled antibodies brought to SARS-CoV fight

Sep. 23, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Trimers of nanobodies, a simpler form of antibody made by some animal species, were effective at preventing and treating COVID-19 in preclinical studies, researchers reported in the Sept. 22, 2021, issue of Nature Communications. The findings, along with others, could form the basis of an inhaled biologics treatment for COVID-19 and, ultimately, other respiratory diseases.
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Lymph nodes

Lymph dysfunction identified as potential metabolic target

Sep. 23, 2021
By John Fox
A multicenter study led by scientists at Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences in Melbourne, Australia, has described a new mesenteric lymph vessel-based pathogenic mechanism, which was shown to contribute to visceral fat accumulation and insulin resistance in both mice and humans.
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Science-James-Naismith-9-22

Inhaled antibodies brought to SARS-CoV fight

Sep. 22, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Trimers of nanobodies, a simpler form of antibody made by some animal species, were effective at preventing and treating COVID-19 in preclinical studies, researchers reported in the Sept. 22, 2021, issue of Nature Communications.
Read More
Cancer cell and DNA

Mouse models, MOS models, organoids can make personalized predictions

Sep. 21, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Although targeted therapies are prescribed on the basis of a patient's molecular makeup, they do not work every time. And in those instances where they do work, they basically stop working every time. In response, researchers have developed a number of systems whose goal it is to predict which drugs will be effective for an individual patients.
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Fingerprints in shape of lungs with magnifying glass and DNA

As targeted options expand, making the best match, and the most matches

Sep. 20, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Researchers have retrospectively divided more than 16,000 non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with EGFR mutations into four structure-based subgroups, and looked at how the members of each subgroup fared depending on which EGFR inhibitor they were given.
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Fingerprints in shape of lungs with magnifying glass and DNA

As targeted options expand, making the best match, and the most matches

Sep. 17, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Researchers have retrospectively divided more than 16,000 non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with EGFR mutations into four structure-based subgroups, and looked at how the members of each subgroup fared depending on which EGFR inhibitor they were given.
Read More
KRAS protein

KRAS just wants to help: Pancreatic KRAS mutations may be protection gone bad

Sep. 17, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Investigators at MD Anderson Cancer Center have published data suggesting that activating KRAS mutations may be selected for in pancreatitis, because they protect pancreatic tissue from damage.
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Brain and blood cells

Blood-to-brain pathway may deliver amyloids in Alzheimer's disease

Sep. 16, 2021
By Tamra Sami
Researchers at Curtin University in Perth, Australia, have discovered that leakage from blood into the brain of fat-carrying particles transporting toxic proteins are a possible cause of Alzheimer's disease.
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Brain and encephalography

Targeting late inflammation via complement system ameliorates TBI-induced epilepsy

Sep. 15, 2021
By W. Todd Penberthy
Investigators working at Gladstone Institutes reported new insights into sleep disturbances and seizures that can be a late consequence of even mild traumatic brain injuries (TBI), and how we may one day best treat these conditions by targeting the complement pathway.
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E-health patch on skin

Austro-Japanese team developing e-health patches that can monitor pulse and blood pressure

Sep. 14, 2021
By Bernard Banga
PARIS – Researchers at the Institute for Surface Technologies and Photonics in Weiz, Austria, and the Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research Osaka University, Japan, have invented new ultra-flexible health monitoring patches that use harvested bio-mechanical energy. “These new devices represent a wireless e-health patch for accurate pulse and blood pressure monitoring,” Andreas Petritz, from the Institute for Surface Technologies and Photonics (the materials research unit of Joanneum Research FmbH), told BioWorld.
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