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BioWorld - Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Home » Authors » Mar de Miguel

Mar de Miguel

Articles

ARTICLES

Brain and DNA
Neurology/psychiatric

Brain cell maps, the neurological zoom of psychiatric disorders

May 27, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Understanding psychiatric disorders at a cellular and molecular level could provide a different perspective to design diagnostic and therapeutic tools searching for the origin of these disorders and the alterations they cause. Fourteen simultaneous studies from the PsychENCODE Consortium have delved into the cellular atlases of human neurodevelopment, reporting the broadest view of neuropsychiatry to date.
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Excitatory (pyramidal) neurons colored by size.
Neurology/psychiatric

Full reconstruction of brain tissue block gives insights into structure, function

May 17, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
A group of scientists from Harvard University have observed and reconstructed the human brain at the resolution of the electron microscope, with all its cells, following all the connections between its neurons around a cubic millimeter of a tissue sample. They took 10 years and the data occupies 1.4 petabytes (1,400 terabytes). However, they are already planning a bigger project.
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Art concept for gene therapy research
Genetic/congenital

Decades of studies on gene and cell therapies lead to ASGCT hits

May 16, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
The success of a vaccine, a gene editing design for an untreated disease, or achieving cell engraftment after several attempts, comes from years of accumulated basic science studies, thousands of experiments, and clinical trials. Innumerable steps precede hits in gene and cell therapies before a first-time revelation, and most of them are failures at the time. At the 27th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy (ASGCT) in Baltimore last week, several groups of scientists presented achievements that years ago looked impossible.
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Art concept for vaccine for cancer
Immuno-oncology

DNA, mRNA, peptides, cells … everything’s possible in cancer vaccines

May 15, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Immunotherapy-based cancer vaccines could permanently kill tumors by stimulating immune cells in multiple ways. At the 27th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy (ASGCT), researchers presented their advances in this field with different techniques in the scientific symposium “Novel nucleic acid and cell-based vaccines for cancer,” organized by the infectious diseases and vaccines committee.
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Vial and syringe with DNA
Ocular

ASGCT: ‘From darkness to light’ in ocular gene therapy

May 14, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
From glaucoma to Stargardt disease, age-related macular degeneration (AMD) to retinitis pigmentosa, or a corneal transplant to Bietti’s crystalline dystrophy, the 27th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy (ASGCT) is working to bring some light to patients with age and congenital diseases that affect vision. From May 7-11, 2024, thousands of scientists are gathering in Baltimore to show their advances against the challenges of delivering genes and cells to the correct place, avoiding immunogenicity and improving diseases.
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Vial and syringe with DNA
Ocular

ASGCT: ‘From darkness to light’ in ocular gene therapy

May 10, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
From glaucoma to Stargardt disease, age-related macular degeneration (AMD) to retinitis pigmentosa, or a corneal transplant to Bietti’s crystalline dystrophy, the 27th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy (ASGCT) is working to bring some light to patients with age and congenital diseases that affect vision. From May 7-11, 2024, thousands of scientists are gathering in Baltimore to show their advances against the challenges of delivering genes and cells to the correct place, avoiding immunogenicity and improving diseases.
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Concept art for prenatal genetic testing and whole genome sequencing.
Genetic/congenital

ASGCT: In utero interventions can prevent organ damage after birth

May 9, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
“Prenatal therapies are the next disruptive technologies in health care, which will advance and shape the future of patient care in the 21st century,” said Graça Almeida-Porada, a professor at the Fetal Research and Therapy Center of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. At the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy (ASGCT) annual meeting in Baltimore on May 5, 2024, Almeida-Porada introduced the first presentation of the scientific symposium “Prospects for Prenatal Gene and Cell Therapy.”
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Illustration of chromosome unraveling down to the DNA
Cancer

Epigenetic changes can initiate cancer, no mutations required

April 30, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
A group of scientists from the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) have overturned a scientific dogma by demonstrating, for the first time, that DNA mutations are not essential for the development of cancer. The researchers temporarily disrupted gene silencing led by Polycomb proteins in fruit flies, and observed that this could produce tumors caused only by epigenetic changes, without permanent changes to the genome.
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3D cross-section illustration of muscle anatomy
Aging

Preserving autophagy protects from muscle aging

April 26, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
A protein whose expression decreases during aging could be key to preserving cellular maintenance mechanisms and preventing the progressive loss of muscle mass that occurs during aging. Scientists from the Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB) and the University of Barcelona (UB) have revealed the role of the TP53INP2 protein in autophagy and the effects of its reduction on skeletal muscle during aging.
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Medically accurate illustration of a baby in the womb of a pregnant mother
Cardiovascular

Peripartum cardiomyopathy is associated with placental senescence

April 24, 2024
By Mar de Miguel
Scientists at Massachusetts General Hospital have linked the risk of heart failure during pregnancy and senescence proteins produced by placental aging, which could clarify how peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) is triggered and opens the door to the development of cardiac function therapies in late pregnancy.
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View All Articles by Mar de Miguel

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