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BioWorld - Monday, June 15, 2026
Home » Authors » Mar de Miguel

Mar de Miguel

Articles

ARTICLES

Drug Design, Drug Delivery & Technologies

Bioengineered multifunctional exosomes evoke cancer immunity

Sep. 14, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
The design of genetically modified exosomes that combine multiple targets killed cancer cells and conferred immunity against them. Scientists at the University of Southern California (USC) applied bioengineering techniques to introduce up to four antitumor functions in the same type of extracellular vesicles and destroy EGFR-positive triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) tumor cells.
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3D reconstructions of images of HIV vaccine
HIV/AIDS

Experimental HIV vaccine protects macaques against infection

Sep. 13, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
A new vaccine that uses the native-like HIV-1 envelope (Env) trimer CH505 and a Toll-like receptor (TLR) 7/8 agonist adjuvant, successfully evaluated in macaques, generated potent polyclonal neutralizing antibodies (nAbs) and a high protection against the infection of the homologous simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV).
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Cancer cell
Cancer

Cancer cells that survive death become more aggressive

Sep. 9, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
Surviving apoptosis after administration of a drug triggered a previously unknown evolutionary process that gave tumor cells greater resistance to subsequent therapies. A cancer cell that does not die gets stronger. Cancer reappears with those cells that escape death thanks to a mechanism that, at the same time, offers a potential therapeutic target. According to a study led by St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in collaboration with the University of Glasgow and University of Oxford, the alternative to the cell death program is a stress response pathway that generates a persister cell phenotype not described before.
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Vial and syringe
Inflammatory

Early treatment with short doses of rapamycin extends lifespan later on

Sep. 8, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
A brief pulse of rapamycin before the onset of aging extended lifespan by triggering lasting increases in autophagy. The authors called this phenomenon "rapamycin memory." Elevated autophagy was accompanied by increased levels of LManV and lysozyme in fruit flies, in intestinal enterocytes in female fly models, and its Man2B1 homologue in mice. In mice, a 3-month treatment in early adulthood had the same effect as chronic treatment, even 6 months after rapamycin was withdrawn. In the study published in the Aug. 29, 2022, issue of Nature Aging and led by researchers at the Max Planck Institute, scientists showed that the lifespan-increasing response to rapamycin treatment decreased with the age at which treatment is started.
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Pancreas illustration
Endocrine/Metabolic

Insulin resistance promotes cognitive impairment in diabetes

Sep. 7, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
Communication between adipose tissue and the brain increases the risk of cognitive impairment in patients with insulin resistance through extracellular vesicles (EVs) containing microRNAs (miRNAs). Neurons could be damaged when these nucleotides reach the hippocampus guided by membrane proteins in prediabetic overweight people.
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RNA strand
Cancer

Educated platelets tell on asymptomatic tumors

Sep. 5, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
Analyzing RNA from blood platelets detected up to 18 different cancers, at early as well as late stages, with a specificity of 99% in asymptomatic controls. The specificity for symptomatic controls, including those who had inflammatory diseases, cardiovascular disease, or benign tumors, was 78%.
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Neurons
Neurology/Psychiatric

Hormone improves cognitive function in Down syndrome

Sep. 2, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
Treatment with injections of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), indicated to prevent sexual maturation deficits in Down syndrome, also reduced cognitive function impairment associated with Down syndrome, also called trisomy 21. With age, about three-quarters of people with Down syndrome develop Alzheimer's disease. They also lose their sense of smell. Both circumstances could improve with pulse doses of GnRH, according to a study led by the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (Inserm) and the University of Lausanne (UNIL) published in the Sept. 1, 2022, issue of Science.
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Neurons

Hormone improves cognitive function in Down syndrome

Sep. 1, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
Treatment with injections of gonadotropin-releasing hormone, indicated to prevent sexual maturation deficits in Down syndrome, also reduced cognitive function impairment associated Down syndrome, also called trisomy 21.
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Illustration of DNA, digestive system
Gastrointestinal

Ten new variants linked to Crohn's disease

Sep. 1, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
In the largest study to date for Crohn's disease, researchers from the Wellcome Sanger Institute and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard identified rare variants of 10 genes associated with this pathology. The researchers sequenced the exomes of 110,000 people, 30,000 patients with Crohn's and 80,000 without this condition, with the participation of a hundred international scientific institutions.
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Lungs and bronchiole
Respiratory

Airway microbiome regulates chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Aug. 30, 2022
By Mar de Miguel
A metabolite derived from the airway microbiome, indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), could become a potential therapeutic candidate for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Researchers at South China Normal University (SCNU) have shown how IAA prevents lung function decline by reducing inflammation, apoptosis and emphysema through IL-22 in the interaction between macrophages and alveolar epithelial cells.
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View All Articles by Mar de Miguel

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