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BioWorld - Tuesday, February 3, 2026
Home » Topics » Science » Bioengineering

Bioengineering
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Model showing DNA methyltransferase (DNMT3) bound to DNA
Neurology/psychiatric

Epigenetic editor silences prion protein gene in the brain

July 22, 2024
Epigenetic silencing could prevent the production of proteins that cause pathologies. CHARM (coupled histone tail for autoinhibition release of methyltransferase), a DNA methylation-based editor, suppressed transcription of prion proteins in the brains of mice.
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Illustration demonstrating parts of the ear

A gene therapy could restore hearing in adults

July 12, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Patients with congenital hearing loss could benefit from a gene therapy currently in development. Although there are approaches that could reverse the process in children and young people before it becomes severe, so far, adults do not have any treatment that prevents the progressive deterioration of auditory sensory cells caused by this disease.
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Illustration demonstrating parts of the ear
Drug design, drug delivery & technologies

A gene therapy could restore hearing in adults

July 11, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Patients with congenital hearing loss could benefit from a gene therapy currently in development. Although there are approaches that could reverse the process in children and young people before it becomes severe, so far, adults do not have any treatment that prevents the progressive deterioration of auditory sensory cells caused by this disease.
Read More
B-cell releasing antibodies

Engineered plasma cells produce effective bispecific antibodies against leukemia

July 5, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Scientists at the University of Washington have engineered human plasma B cells modified to express long-lasting bispecific antibodies that could be used to treat leukemia without requiring continuous dosing.
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B-cell releasing antibodies
Cancer

Engineered plasma cells produce effective bispecific antibodies against leukemia

July 4, 2024
By Mar de Miguel

Scientists at the University of Washington have engineered human plasma B cells modified to express long-lasting bispecific antibodies that could be used to treat leukemia without requiring continuous dosing.

“We are trying to engineer plasma cells to make as a stable source for biologic drugs. One thing that is really unique about plasma cells is that they can live for a really long time … up to 10 years or even 100 years depending on the type of plasma cell that that you make,” Richard James, senior author of the study, principal investigator at Seattle Children’s Research Institute, and associate professor at the University of Washington, told BioWorld.


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Bridge recombinase mechanism 3D illustration

New techniques open the way for large-scale programmable genome editing

July 2, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
New single-step genome editing techniques that enable the insertion, inversion or deletion of long DNA sequences at specified genome positions have been demonstrated in bacteria.
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Bridge recombinase mechanism 3D illustration

New techniques open the way for large-scale programmable genome editing

June 27, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
New single-step genome editing techniques that enable the insertion, inversion or deletion of long DNA sequences at specified genome positions have been demonstrated in bacteria.
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Bridge recombinase mechanism 3D illustration
Drug design, drug delivery & technologies

New techniques open the way for large-scale programmable genome editing

June 26, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
New single-step genome editing techniques that enable the insertion, inversion or deletion of long DNA sequences at specified genome positions have been demonstrated in bacteria. The advance opens the door to the development of programmable methods for rearranging DNA, using recombinase enzymes guided by RNA. The two different approaches to using insertion sequences (IS) – some of the simplest and most compact mobile genetic elements – are described in two papers published in Nature and Nature Communications.
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Blood cells and destruction of cancer cell
Cancer

A pan-approach against blood cancer preserving hematopoiesis

May 29, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
A group of scientists from Basel University Hospital have designed an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) that eliminated blood cancer cells without attacking healthy hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), which they modified by base editing and transplanted to renew an altered blood system. They achieved this by focusing on the panhematopoietic marker CD45.
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Gene editing illustration

Next-generation genome editing tools surpass CRISPR milestone

Jan. 4, 2024
By Anette Breindl and Mar de Miguel
Modifying a patient’s DNA is no longer just for science fiction novels. The CRISPR gene editing technique developed by Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier only took 10 years to reach the market as Casgevy (exagamglogene autotemcel/exa-cel, Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc.), treating congenital pathologies such as β-thalassemia and severe sickle cell disease. But science does not stop.
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