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BioWorld - Monday, February 2, 2026
Home » Authors » Anette Breindl

Anette Breindl

Articles

ARTICLES

Vial and syringe with DNA

In HIV, gene therapy could be alternative path to functional cure

Oct. 27, 2023
By Anette Breindl
At the 30th Annual Congress of the European Society for Gene and Cell Therapy in Brussels this week, researchers presented both preclinical and clinical strategies for applying gene therapy to a functional HIV cure. At a Wednesday session on Infectious Diseases & Vaccines, Alessio Nahmad, of Tabby Therapeutics Ltd., described using B cells edited to express broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) 3BNC117 to deliver high titers of antibodies in mice.
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Vial and syringe with DNA
Drug Design, Drug Delivery & Technologies

In HIV, gene therapy could be alternative path to functional cure

Oct. 26, 2023
By Anette Breindl
At the 30th Annual Congress of the European Society for Gene and Cell Therapy in Brussels this week, researchers presented both preclinical and clinical strategies for applying gene therapy to a functional HIV cure. At a Wednesday session on Infectious Diseases & Vaccines, Alessio Nahmad, of Tabby Therapeutics Ltd., described using B cells edited to express broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) 3BNC117 to deliver high titers of antibodies in mice.
Read More
CRISPR-edited kidney under microscope
Immune

Most-edited-ever donor genomes lead to 2-year survival in porcine-to-primate kidney transplants

Oct. 11, 2023
By Anette Breindl and Mar de Miguel
Scientists at Egenesis Inc. have transplanted kidneys from genome-edited pigs into cynomolgus monkeys that remained functional for long periods after transplantation. The monkeys, whose own kidneys were removed during the surgery, survived for a median of 176 days after receiving one pig kidney. Maximal survival was just over 2 years. The data were published today in Nature. Egenesis CEO Mike Curtis told reporters that the study has achieved the longest survival to date “using clinically translatable immunosuppression … longer survival has been achieved using really aggressive immunosuppression that really isn’t clinically translatable.”
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CRISPR-edited kidney under microscope
Immune

Most-edited-ever donor genomes lead to 2-year survival in porcine-to-primate kidney transplants

Oct. 11, 2023
By Anette Breindl and Mar de Miguel
Scientists at Egenesis Inc. have transplanted kidneys from genome-edited pigs into cynomolgus monkeys that remained functional for long periods after transplantation. The monkeys, whose own kidneys were removed during the surgery, survived for a median of 176 days after receiving one pig kidney. Maximal survival was just over 2 years. The data were published today in Nature. Egenesis CEO Mike Curtis told reporters that the study has achieved the longest survival to date “using clinically translatable immunosuppression … longer survival has been achieved using really aggressive immunosuppression that really isn’t clinically translatable.”
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AI generated illustration of a brain on fire
Neurology/Psychiatric

ECNP 2023: Look for antibodies in idiopathic psychoses? First, maybe better tests

Oct. 10, 2023
By Anette Breindl
For individuals who develop an unexpected psychosis, there is something to be said for testing them for autoimmune antibodies. And something against. At the 36th Congress of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP) this week, the topic was worth a controversy session, where speakers presented the pros and cons of the approach. Currently used tests have a specificity of 99%. But as Ester Coutinho, consultant neurologist at the University of Coimbra, pointed out, the validity of diagnostic tests depends on the prevalence of the disorder one is looking for as well. Coutinho estimated that autoimmune psychoses account for 1% of psychoses overall.
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Woman  in military clothing talking with psychologist
Neurology/Psychiatric

ECNP 2023: Boosting fear unlearning is one avenue toward treating PTSD

Oct. 9, 2023
By Anette Breindl
For most psychiatric illnesses, the precipitating event is mysterious. Many conditions are thought to result from a mix of genetic risk and environmental factors, but the specific trigger remains unknown. In post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the environmental trigger is usually clear. In many cases, it is all the affected individuals can think about. “Intrusive reliving” of the triggering situation is one of the core features of PTSD.
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Generative AI illustration depicting the structure of a granuloma caused by tuberculosis
Infection

To fight TB, understanding state transitions helps help cells make better choices

Oct. 3, 2023
By Anette Breindl
Tuberculosis (TB) is the second leading infectious disease killer. According to the World Health Organization, every year, more than 10 million people fall ill with TB, and 1.5 million people die from the disease. The thing is, though, that it could be worse. Not nearly everyone who is infected has TB disease. “Tuberculosis is a disease that targets a small number of infected people,” Igor Kramnik, of Boston University, told BioWorld.
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AI generated illustration of a brain on fire
Neurology/Psychiatric

Newco news: Arialys has autoimmune solution to psychosis problem

Sep. 27, 2023
By Anette Breindl
Arialys Therapeutics Inc. launched this month with $58 million in seed funding, an experimental compound it is developing for autoimmune encephalitis and autoimmune psychosis, and high aspirations for its field. “Yes, I want to treat these patients, I want these patients to have a better life. But I also want drug discovery and development folks to think differently about discovering new drugs for the CNS,” Jay Lichter told BioWorld.
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Stem cell-derived vertebral bone with recruited breast cancer tumor cells
Musculoskeletal

The skeletal stem cell contains multitudes, with translational implications

Sep. 20, 2023
By Anette Breindl
Long bones, vertebrae and skull bones have distinct types of stem cells, and new insights into those stem cells could lead to new ways to treat both rare developmental disorders of skull formation and the all-too-common phenomenon of bone metastases. Scientifically, the work, which was published in two papers by Matthew Greenblatt and colleagues in Nature, adds to the increasing understanding of bone’s complexities. “Bone may serve as an endocrine organ that is secreting factors throughout the body,” Greenblatt said.
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Illustration of Alzheimer’s in the brain.
Neurology/Psychiatric

Study identifies cause of death for Alzheimer’s neurons

Sep. 18, 2023
By Anette Breindl
By creating a new mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease that better recapitulated how the disease plays out in humans, investigators at KU Leuven have gained new insights into how amyloid plaques, tau tangles and neuronal death are related at the molecular level.
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View All Articles by Anette Breindl

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