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BioWorld - Sunday, February 8, 2026
Home » Authors » Mar de Miguel

Mar de Miguel

Articles

ARTICLES

Illustration of pencil erasing DNA helix
Immune

Stem cell base editing restores T cells in severe combined immunodeficiencies

March 27, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
Base editing (BE), a technique that modifies a single nucleotide in living cells, has been successfully tested to resolve the CD3δ mutation in severe combined immunodeficiencies (SCIDs) and produce functional T cells. For now, scientists at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), completed the study on patient stem cells and artificial thymic organoids, shortening the way for future clinical trials.
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Cancer

RHOJ protein helps skin cancer resist chemotherapy

March 24, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
RHOJ, a small GTPase, could hold the key to the survival of tumor cells during cancer treatments. When epithelial cells transformed into mesenchymal cells, the Rho-related GTP-binding protein RhoJ regulated their resistance to chemotherapy. The scientists observed this mechanism in mouse models of skin squamous cell carcinoma, but their results could go beyond just one type of cancer. When the team started its experiments, which were published March 23, 2023, in Nature, “I had never heard about RHOJ before,” the lead author Cédric Blanpain told BioWorld. Blanpain is the director of the Laboratory of Stem Cells and Cancer at the Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB).
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Representative images of MMP-12 stained (magenta) human kidney biopsies.
Nephrology

T cells initiate kidney inflammation in glomerulonephritis

March 22, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
A study from the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE) in Germany has identified a type of T cell that triggered glomerulonephritis (GN) and produced loss of kidney function in mice. The scientists described an autoimmune pathway of this disease mediated by the accumulation of T cells producing granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in the kidneys and found a possible therapeutic target.
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Cancer

Macrophages drive invasive breast cancer

March 20, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
T cells do not have the last word in some breast cancers. According to a study from the University of Pittsburgh, the key to estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast tumors are macrophages, not T cells, and targeting them could prevent immunotherapy failure in this type of cancer.
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Cancer

Releasing T cells from neutrophil traps restores immunotherapy in pancreatic cancer

March 16, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
The traps that neutrophils develop against microorganisms also hold T cells and prevent the success of immunotherapy in pancreatic cancer. To free the immune system from itself, scientists at the Istituto Oncologico Veneto in Italy made a key that unlocked this sticky dungeon from an antibody against arginase-1 (ARG1), an enzyme also present in the trap.
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Lizard with detached tail
Neurology/Psychiatric

The ‘lizard strategy’ could work against neurodegeneration

March 14, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
Losing the tail to survive. In neurons, the lizard’s strategy, losing the axon to be safe, could prevent cell death. Scientists at Harvard Medical School have observed that certain toxins activated axon loss to prevent damage and survive. This mechanism was mediated by the Gasdermin-E (GSDME) protein, which destroyed the mitochondria in the axons and eliminated the affected nerve projection before the cell died. The inhibition of GSDME prevented the loss of neurons and delayed the progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in mice models.
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Photomicrograph of bone marrow aspirate showing myeloblasts of acute myeloid leukemia
Cancer

A new dual strategy for acute myeloid leukemia

March 13, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
Two molecules that affected the cell cycle only of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells could be used as a clinical strategy against this pathology. Scientists at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and Harvard University have discovered that DEG-35 and DEG-77 arrested the cell cycle and promoted cell differentiation and apoptosis in these cells.
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Concept art for Mitochondrial DNA.
Inflammatory

Fumarate accumulation moderates inflammation through mitochondrial genetic material

March 10, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
A deficiency in fumarate metabolism could be behind a new mechanism of inflammation mediated by mitochondrial DNA and RNA. Two independent and simultaneous studies described how the accumulation of fumarate in the mitochondria released the genetic material of this organelle through vesicles, activating an inflammatory signaling pathway.
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Illustration of tau proteins in Alzheimer's disease
Neurology/Psychiatric

T cells and microglia jointly drive tauopathies

March 9, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
Scientists from Washington University in St. Louis have described a role for T cells in the neurodegeneration associated with the tau protein. Tau accumulation in the brain activated microglia. This signal triggered the activation of T cells in other parts of the body, attracting them to the brain. Once there, the interaction of these T cells and microglia produced the neuronal damage seen in Alzheimer’s disease and other tauopathies.
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Infection

Autoantibodies against chemokines are possible ally against long COVID

March 7, 2023
By Mar de Miguel
Autoantibodies are typically not good news. But a group of researchers from Bellinzona, Switzerland, have observed that the presence of autoantibodies against chemokines, a special class of cytokines, is associated with mild disease and less risk of developing long COVID. “Our hypothesis was that antibodies to chemokines, if they existed, would also be associated with a negative outcome of the disease. But, what we found, in fact, was the exact opposite of what we were predicting,” Davide Robbiani, director of the Institute for Research in Biomedicine, told BioWorld.
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View All Articles by Mar de Miguel

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