Proteins predict significant step toward development of diabetes
- Details
- Category: Research
Scientists have taken an important step forward in predicting who will develop Type 1 diabetes months before symptoms appear.
In a paper published online on June 29 in Cell Reports Medicine, researchers at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and their colleagues identify a set of altered proteins that predict a condition known as islet autoimmunity, a precursor for everyone who will ultimately develop Type 1 diabetes.
Higher doses of oral semaglutide improves blood sugar control and weight loss
- Details
- Category: Research
Diabetes is a progressive disease that affects one's ability to control blood sugar levels. For many patients, the condition becomes more severe over time and blood sugar levels grow more difficult to manage. Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists, such as semaglutide, have granted patients more control in lowering of blood sugar.
Magdeburg researchers discover a new mechanism of cancer immune defense
- Details
- Category: Research
Modern immunotherapies boost the body's own defenses against cancer. They activate killer T cells of the immune system that can specifically recognize and destroy cancer cells. In many patients, however, cancer cells adapt and become invisible to killer T cells so that the treatment is no longer effective. An interdisciplinary team of researchers from Magdeburg has now discovered a new mechanism that enables the immune system to also eliminate such invisible cancer cells.
New anti-coagulants may help treat sepsis and COVID-19
- Details
- Category: Research
Scientists from Trinity College Dublin have just discovered that the drug dimethylfumarate can block blood clotting during infection, offering hope that it could be used to treat a number of conditions, such a life-threatening disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC), which can occur in serious infections with bacteria that lead to sepsis or in response to viral infections such as COVID-19.
For resistant breast cancers, two drugs may be better than one
- Details
- Category: Research
Cancer cells are even smarter than scientists previously believed, according to new CU Boulder research. When these cells are confronted with potent new drugs called CDK2 inhibitors, which are designed to prevent cancer from proliferating, they can trigger a workaround to survive the assault in as little as one to two hours.
Tethering of shattered chromosomal fragments paves way for new cancer therapies
- Details
- Category: Research
Healthy cells work hard to maintain the integrity of our DNA, but occasionally, a chromosome can get separated from the others and break apart during cell division. The tiny fragments of DNA then get reassembled in random order in the new cell, sometimes producing cancerous gene mutations.
This chromosomal shattering and rearranging is called “chromothripsis” and occurs in the majority of human cancers, especially cancers of the bones, brain and fatty tissue.
Scientists discover small RNA that regulates bacterial infection
- Details
- Category: Research
People with weakened immune systems are at constant risk of infection. Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a common environmental bacterium, can colonize different body parts, such as the lungs, leading to persistent, chronic infections that can last a lifetime - a common occurrence in people with cystic fibrosis.
But the bacteria can sometimes change their behavior and enter the bloodstream, causing chronic localized infections to become acute and potentially fatal.
More Pharma News ...
- Study shows metformin lowers the risk of getting long COVID
- Taurine may be a key to longer and healthier life
- New drug delays progression of glioma, a deadly brain cancer
- Researchers use ‘natural’ system to identify proteins most useful for developing an effective HIV vaccine
- New blood biomarker can predict if cognitively healthy elderly will develop Alzheimer's disease
- Large study provides scientists with deeper insight into long COVID symptoms
- Multivitamin improves memory in older adults, study finds