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 - Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Home » Authors » Anette Breindl

Articles by Anette Breindl

Scientific data illustration
It’s not FAIR!

Accelerated by COVID-19, science changes will outlast pandemic

April 7, 2020
By Anette Breindl
COVID-19 has disrupted science in the way it has disrupted everything else. In the short term, universities have largely closed shop as a way to maximize social distancing, and lots of science – or at least, lots of bench work – is not getting done.
Read More

BioWorld MedTech’s Oncology Extra for April 7, 2020

April 7, 2020
By Mark McCarty and Anette Breindl
Keeping you up to date on recent developments in oncology, including: Technetium crunch resurfaces as COVID-19 roils the globe; Microbiome changes precede tumor development in CRC; Il-27 proposed as target in prostate cancer.
Read More
1918-19 Spanish flu patient, paramedics, ambulance
Surveillance

The next pandemic: Death, taxes and zoonotic spillover

April 7, 2020
By Anette Breindl
“In any crisis, leaders have two equally important responsibilities: solve the immediate problem and keep it from happening again... The first point is more pressing, but the second has crucial long-term consequences.” So wrote Bill Gates in a February editorial in The New England Journal of Medicine about COVID-19, which “has started behaving a lot like the once-in-a-century pathogen we’ve been worried about.”
Read More
Scientific data illustration
It’s not FAIR!

Accelerated by COVID-19, science changes will outlast pandemic

April 3, 2020
By Anette Breindl
COVID-19 has disrupted science in the way it has disrupted everything else. In the short term, universities have largely closed shop as a way to maximize social distancing, and lots of science – or at least, lots of bench work – is not getting done.
Read More

BioWorld MedTech’s Neurology Extra for April 3, 2020

April 3, 2020
By Andrea Applegate and Anette Breindl
Keeping you up to date on recent developments in neurology, including: Engineers 3D print brain implants; Minimal phenotyping gives minimal insights into MDD genetics; Optogenetic plaque model traces neurodegeneration in AD; Once repulsive, always repulsive.
Read More
Colorectal cancer illustration

Bench Press for April 3, 2020

April 3, 2020
By Anette Breindl
BioWorld looks at translational medicine, including: Microbiome changes precede tumor development in CRC; Converting catch and release to PARP traps; Smart bacterium senses environment; The dose makes the poison – timing, too; Minimal phenotyping gives minimal insights into MDD genetics; Hypoxia linked to common form of muscular dystrophy; Stopping tau in its tracks; Optogenetic plaque model traces neurodegeneration in AD; Once repulsive, always repulsive.
Read More

BioWorld MedTech’s Diagnostics Extra for April 2, 2020

April 2, 2020
By Meg Bryant and Anette Breindl
Keeping you up to date on recent developments in diagnostics, including: Tracking heart function with AI; Localizing arrhythmia; Wearables not yet ready for prime time; A20s inflammation-fighting properties decoded.
Read More
Scientific data illustration
It’s not FAIR!

Accelerated by COVID-19, science changes will outlast pandemic

April 2, 2020
By Anette Breindl
COVID-19 has disrupted science in the way it has disrupted everything else. In the short term, universities have largely closed shop as a way to maximize social distancing, and lots of science – or at least, lots of bench work – is not getting done.
Read More

BioWorld MedTech’s Oncology Extra for March 31, 2020

March 31, 2020
By Liz Hollis and Anette Breindl
Keeping you up to date on recent developments in oncology, including: How lung tumors seed to brain; UVA looks to genes to improve cancer outcomes; Study shows promise of immunotherapy against solid tumors.
Read More
Acute myeloid leukemia illustration
Gene, meet environment

Setting ‘evolutionary traps’ can lure cancer cells into an ambush

March 30, 2020
By Anette Breindl
As organisms adapt to their environment, adaptations that serve them in their current environment can become liabilities if that environment changes. The control of traits that are an asset in one situation and a liability by the same gene is called antagonistic pleiotropy. In the March 16, 2020, online issue of Nature Genetics, researchers reported a method to systematically identify mutations that conferred antagonistic pleiotropy – in the form of resistance to one drug, but heightened sensitivity to another – in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells.
Read More
Previous 1 2 … 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 … 401 402 Next

Popular Stories

  • Today's news in brief

    BioWorld
  • Brain and virus with chromosome

    CROI 2026: Neurodegeneration, the challenge of aging with HIV

    BioWorld
    Antiretroviral therapies against HIV have been in use for more than 30 years and have enabled people living with HIV to maintain undetectable viral levels. Many...
  • Depression concept with human, broken brain and heavy rain

    CROI 2026 highlights depression and cognitive vulnerability in HIV

    BioWorld
    The effects of aging pose an additional challenge for people with HIV due to the neurological and psychological consequences that persist despite antiretroviral...
  • News in brief

    BioWorld Asia
    BioWorld Asia briefs for March 3, 2026
  • University of Southern California reports new MAPT aggregation inhibitors

    BioWorld Science
    The University of Southern California has identified (2-oxo-2H-chromen-3-yl) scaffold-based carboxamide analogues acting as potent microtubule-associated protein...
  • 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