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BioWorld - Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Breaking News: Trump administration impacts continue to roil the life sciences sectorBreaking News: Trump administration impacts continue to roil the life sciences sector
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Hourglass on glowing circuit board, symbolizing time and technology
Aging

ARDD 2024: Back to the future in the times of aging research

Aug. 29, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Since the publication of The Hallmarks of Aging in 2013, aging research has exploded. The field now has more than 300,000 articles on the biological signals of the effect of time on the body. What would Marty McFly, the legendary character from the Back to the Future saga who traveled with his DeLorean time machine from the ‘80s to the ‘50s, think if he visited 2024 and saw laboratories experimenting with techniques to turn back the biological clocks of cells or increase the lifespan of rejuvenated mice?
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Hair follicle containing phagocytic stem cells
Dermatologic

Stem cells eat dead cells to ensure tissue integrity

Aug. 27, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Phagocytosis – eliminating millions of dead cells every day – requires specialized cells such as macrophages, the true professionals, which migrate to engulf waste and dying cells. But they are not the only ones that can perform this task, as scientists at Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) discovered when they investigated hair follicle stem cells (HFSCs), a tissue in constant regeneration, to clarify how dying cells are detected and cleared in the epithelium and the mesenchyme.
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Glucocerebrosidase enzyme structure rendering
Endocrine/metabolic

Two enzymatic modulators could alleviate Gaucher disease

Aug. 26, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
People with the rare inherited metabolic disorder Gaucher disease have a deficiency in the lipid-digesting glucocerebrosidase enzyme, which causes the accumulation of harmful levels of glucolipids in various organs. The enzyme has a very short half-life, which rules out enzyme replacement as an effective therapy, and as things stand, there are few treatments for this and other lysosomal storage diseases (LSDs). Now, researchers have discovered two small molecules that enhance the activity of glucocerebrosidase in cellular models of LSD, pointing to a potential new approach to treating these diseases.
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Kelin Zhao and Daniel Gray
Aging

Discovery of new age-related epithelial cells sheds light on aging in the thymus

Aug. 23, 2024
By Tamra Sami
Researchers at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research (WEHI) in Melbourne have discovered new cells that drive the aging process in the thymus that could unlock a way to restore function and prevent immunity from waning as we age. The thymus is the first organ in the body to shrink as people age. As this happens, the T-cell growth areas in the thymus are replaced with fatty tissue, diminishing T-cell production and contributing to a weakened immune system.
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Gamma secretase protein complex
Neurology/psychiatric

Presenilin mutations kill neurons, no amyloid-β required

Aug. 23, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Scientists at Harvard Medical School have shown that in mice lacking amyloid beta (Aβ), the fundamental hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD), neurons died from the effect of the most harmful mutation of this neurodegenerative disease. They showed that presenilin (PS) could be behind the origin of the disease without the need for Aβ. They maintain that it is time to update theories and redirect efforts.
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Illustration of male vs. female bodies showing organs
Endocrine/metabolic

Female sex hormones, adiposity are bad mix in multiple sclerosis

Aug. 21, 2024
By Anette Breindl
The risk of developing multiple sclerosis (MS) is nearly four times as high for women as it is for men. And that relative risk has increased sharply over time. In 1955, women were only slightly more likely than men to develop MS. A research team at the University of Toronto and the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (OMRF) has gained new insights into possible causes for this increasing disparity.
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Illustration of influenza virus replication complex with chicken, cow, human, seal wireframe drawings
Infection

Structural study gives insights into influenza virus species jumps

Aug. 20, 2024
By Anette Breindl
“There are hundreds of strains of bird flu, and most of them don’t infect humans, or even mammals,” Stephen Cusack told BioWorld. “There are two main reasons for that.” To be able to cause an infection, a virus “has to be able to get into the cell, and for that it needs a receptor,” Cusack said. For influenza viruses, those receptors are hemagglutinin receptors, and they differ in subtle but important ways between birds and mammals.
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Illustration of HIV cell entry
HIV/AIDS

Treating HIV with defective, thieving HIV

Aug. 13, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
A strategy inspired by deficient HIV replication could be used as a treatment to reduce viral load in patients living with HIV and help control the pandemic of the retrovirus. Scientists from the University of California San Francisco want to use HIV against itself by using a parasitic version of the pathogen.
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Illustration of ovaries and uterus with endometriosis
Obstetrics

(Modest) funding increases bring endometriosis discovery impetus

Aug. 9, 2024
By Nuala Moran
After decades of being woefully under-diagnosed and all but ignored by the biotech and pharma industry, recent advances in understanding its complex etiology could be opening the way to new treatments for endometriosis. Impetus is coming from (modest) increases in funding for basic research, such as the Biden administration’s $200 million for women’s health research and NIH grants under an ‘Advancing cures and therapies and ending endometriosis diagnostic delays’ call announced in March of this year.
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Illustration of Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites
Drug design, drug delivery & technologies

Parasite could deliver therapeutic proteins to the brain

Aug. 8, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Infection or cure? Scientists from Tel Aviv University and the University of Glasgow genetically modified the Toxoplasma gondii to bring a protein inside neurons. The novelty of using a protozoan that can travel from the gut to parasitize the CNS contrasts with the possibility of causing a disease. The scientists are already working on how to avoid it.
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