BioWorld. Link to homepage.

Clarivate
  • BioWorld
  • BioWorld Science
  • BioWorld Asia
  • Data Snapshots
    • Biopharma
    • Medical technology
    • Infographics: Dynamic digital data analysis
    • Index insights
    • NME Digest
  • Special reports
    • Infographics: Dynamic digital data analysis
    • Trump administration impacts
    • Med-tech outlook 2026
    • Under threat: mRNA vaccine research
    • BioWorld at 35
    • Biopharma M&A scorecard
    • Bioworld 2025 review
    • BioWorld MedTech 2025 review
    • BioWorld Science 2025 review
    • Women's health
    • China's GLP-1 landscape
    • PFA re-energizes afib market
    • China CAR T
    • Alzheimer's disease
    • Coronavirus
    • More reports can be found here

BioWorld. Link to homepage.

  • Sign In
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
Subscribe
BioWorld - Monday, March 16, 2026
Home » Authors » Anette Breindl

Articles by Anette Breindl

Petri dish and capsules

Moving side chains amps up peptides' infection-fighting abilities

Aug. 25, 2021
By Subhasree Nag and Anette Breindl
A team of researchers has created peptide-like molecules – "peptoids" – with antiviral properties that could circumvent the naturally occurring antimicrobial peptides' shortcomings.
Read More
Brain and DNA

Gene therapy ameliorates androgen receptor-driven neuromuscular disease

Aug. 24, 2021
By Anette Breindl
For most people, neither polyglutamine disorders nor neuromuscular disorders are likely to be among the things they associate with androgen receptor (AR) dysfunction. But the three are indeed linked. And researchers have reported new insights into the nature of those links that could lead to a treatment for spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy, and possibly other disorders linked to AR signaling dysfunction.
Read More
Single strand RNA

New delivery system SENDs therapeutic RNA without triggering immune system

Aug. 24, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Investigators at MIT have identified a protein capable of delivering its own mRNA to cells, and engineered that protein to deliver mRNA sequences of their choosing.
Read More
Brain and DNA

Gene therapy ameliorates androgen receptor-driven neuromuscular disease

Aug. 20, 2021
By Anette Breindl
For most people, neither polyglutamine disorders nor neuromuscular disorders are likely to be among the things they associate with androgen receptor (AR) dysfunction. But the three are indeed linked. And researchers have reported new insights into the nature of those links that could lead to a treatment for spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy, and possibly other disorders linked to AR signaling dysfunction.
Read More
Long COVID word cloud

‘Not just the flu’ holds for SARS-CoV-2 long-term effects, too

Aug. 19, 2021
By Anette Breindl
When SARS-CoV-2 first emerged in 2020, with respiratory symptoms as the most obvious feature of infection, the most obvious comparison was to influenza. COVID-19, of course, was never just another flu.
Read More
Silhouette of head, brain

Stress hormones affect brain plasticity via distinct mechanisms

Aug. 18, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Researchers have shown that glucocorticoids, a type of steroid hormones, target both neuroplasticity-related genes and genes related to ciliary function in the brain. However, the effects on the different processes are mediated via different receptors, and in response to different stimuli. A study investigated the specific targets of glucocorticoids, giving new insights into the biological mechanisms of stress adaptations, and how they are linked to neural plasticity.
Read More
Silhouette of head, brain

Stress hormones affect brain plasticity via distinct mechanisms

Aug. 10, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Researchers have shown that glucocorticoids, a type of steroid hormones, target both neuroplasticity-related genes and genes related to ciliary function in the brain. However, the effects on the different processes are mediated via different receptors, and in response to different stimuli. A study investigated the specific targets of glucocorticoids, giving new insights into the biological mechanisms of stress adaptations, and how they are linked to neural plasticity.
Read More
T cells

T-cell exhaustion is durable, but specific

Aug. 9, 2021
By Anette Breindl
It's a good news, bad news scenario for exhausted T cells in chronic infections. Multiple groups of investigators reported in the July 26, 2021, online issue of Nature Immunology that even after a chronic hepatitis C virus infection was cured, T cells that had become dysfunctional during the infection retained epigenetic "scars" that prevented them from becoming fully functional memory T cells.
Read More
Microscope and coronavirus illustration

New study is both reality check and shot in the arm for SARS-CoV-2 drug repurposing

Aug. 5, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Investigators at the University of California at San Francisco have identified a confounder that appears to be behind the purported anti-SARS-CoV-2 effects of a number of therapeutic candidates that were identified via repurposing.
Read More
Microscope and coronavirus illustration

New study is both reality check and shot in the arm for SARS-CoV-2 drug repurposing

Aug. 4, 2021
By Anette Breindl
Investigators at the University of California at San Francisco have identified a confounder that appears to be behind the purported anti-SARS-CoV-2 effects of a number of therapeutic candidates that were identified via repurposing.
Read More
Previous 1 2 … 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 … 401 402 Next

Popular Stories

  • Today's news in brief

    BioWorld
    BioWorld briefs for March 13, 2026.
  • Art concept for targeting the brain

    Precision psychiatry beyond, or before, biomarkers

    BioWorld
    There is broad agreement that psychiatric diagnoses in their current form are not reflective of any underlying biology, and that this is one of the things...
  • News in brief

    BioWorld Asia
    BioWorld Asia briefs for March 10, 2026
  • Illustration of a motor neuron

    Keros reports beneficial effects of RKER-065 in ALS model

    BioWorld Science
    Keros Therapeutics Inc. has presented data regarding their activin receptor ligand trap, RKER-065, for the inhibition of the activin/myostatin signaling axis.
  • Skin irritation on hands

    HX-16108 holds promise for treating inflammatory skin diseases

    BioWorld Science
    Atopic dermatitis (AD) is an inflammatory skin disease accompanied by pruritus, for which IL-13 and IL-31 are clinically validated targets. Earendil Labs Inc. has...
  • BioWorld
    • Today's news
    • Analysis and data insight
    • Clinical
    • Data Snapshots
    • Deals and M&A
    • Financings
    • Medical technology
    • Newco news
    • Opinion
    • Regulatory
  • BioWorld Science
    • Today's news
    • Biomarkers
    • Cancer
    • Conferences
    • Endocrine/metabolic
    • Immune
    • Infection
    • Neurology/psychiatric
    • NME Digest
    • Patents
  • BioWorld Asia
    • Today's news
    • Analysis and data insight
    • Australia
    • China
    • Clinical
    • Deals and M&A
    • Financings
    • Newco news
    • Regulatory
    • Science
  • More
    • About
    • Advertise with BioWorld
    • Archives
    • Article reprints and permissions
    • Contact us
    • Cookie policy
    • Copyright notice
    • Data methodology
    • Infographics: Dynamic digital data analysis
    • Index insights
    • Podcasts
    • Privacy policy
    • Share your news with BioWorld
    • Staff
    • Terms of use
    • Topic alerts
Follow Us

Copyright ©2026. All Rights Reserved. Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing