Cell Signaling – News and Features

News
Misplaced Immune Cells Drive Deadly Lung Disease
Rutgers Health researchers have discovered that networks of misplaced immune cells drive an aggressive lung disease, potentially opening a path to new treatments for a condition that kills 80% of patients within a decade.

News
Mapping Stomach Cancer Tumors for Better, More Precise Treatments
By using advanced mapping technologies, scientists have created a detailed “atlas” of stomach tumors, revealing hidden patterns in how cancer cells behave, evolve and interact with their environment

News
Cannabis Use Alters Fatty Acid Metabolism Linked to Schizophrenia Risk
A study from the University of the Basque Country explores blood-based biomarkers to understand why some cannabis users develop schizophrenia. Using lipidomics, researchers identified specific fatty acid profiles that differentiated users.

News
Targeting VDAC2 Could Enhance Tumor Response to Immunotherapy
A study from St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital reveals that the protein VDAC2 acts as a “signal jammer” in tumors, preventing immune system communication. By removing VDAC2, tumors became more sensitive to immunotherapy.

News
Blocking Prion Protein Slows Brain Cancer Progression
Researchers find that tumor stem cells became less able to proliferate and invade tissues when gene editing blocked the production of the prion protein; the results suggest that the molecule could be a therapeutic target.

News
Novel Cellular Mechanism May Inform Treatments for Congenital Spine Defects
Researchers have identified novel mechanisms regulating the development of the spinal column, which could inform new treatments for congenital scoliosis and other related birth defects.

News
Scientists Discover the Secret DNA Fueling Pancreatic Cancer
Pancreatic cancer has a notorious capacity to adapt and resist therapy. Now, a study uncovers a hidden driver of this adaptability: extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA).

Article
Inducible Degrons Help Researchers Catalog Gene Function
Technology Networks caught up with Professor Mazhar Adli to learn more about his research on the characterization of essential human genes and the benefits of using inducible degrons to study gene function.

News
Molecular Switch Boosts Stem Cell Numbers for Therapies
A single molecular switch is essential for blood stem cells to enter an activated, regenerative state in which they produce new blood cells, according to a preclinical study led by Weill Cornell Medicine investigators.

News
Repurposed ALS Drug Helps Diagnose Neurodegeneration
Scientists at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital have used positron emission tomography (PET) with edaravone, a drug used to treat ALS, to detect oxidative stress, which leads to brain damage.
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