Medical Research
- Mucosa-associated microbiota drives pathogenic functions in IBD-derived intestinal iNKT cells
Pro-inflammatory iNKT cells are enriched in IBD patients’ lamina propria. Exposure to the mucosa-associated microbiota drives their activation, inducing pathogenic activities against the epithelium.
- Chromosome alignment maintenance requires the MAP RECQL4, mutated in the Rothmund–Thomson syndrome
RECQL4, which is mutated in the Rothmund–Thomson syndrome characterized by premature aging and cancer susceptibility, is a microtubule-associated protein required for mitotic chromosome alignment.
- Peroxisome biogenesis deficiency attenuates the BDNF-TrkB pathway-mediated development of the cerebellum
Peroxisome biogenesis deficiency leads to increased expression of BDNF and of a truncated form of the BDNF receptor in the cerebellum, attenuates BDNF-TrkB signaling, and results in malformation of the cerebellum.
- Extracellular vesicles from mature dendritic cells (DC) differentiate monocytes into immature DC
Mature dendritic cells (DC) secrete substantial amounts of vesicles that are primarily ingested by monocytes, leading to differentiation processes in these target cells towards monocyte-derived DC.
- Loss of HDAC11 ameliorates clinical symptoms in a multiple sclerosis mouse model
In an animal model for multiple sclerosis, the absence of HDAC11 reduces clinical severity, spinal cord demyelination, and immune cell infiltration, suggesting that HDAC11 is a promising target for MS treatment.
- Identification of Plasmodium GAPDH epitopes for generation of antibodies that inhibit malaria infection
This study reports on the identification of two Plasmodium GAPDH epitope peptides that are responsible for sporozoite–Kupffer cell interaction and act as antigens against malaria infection.
- Discovery of a cofactor-independent inhibitor of Mycobacterium tuberculosis InhA
AN12855 is a novel cofactor-independent inhibitor of Mycobacterium tuberculosis InhA. AN12855 has potent activity against M. tuberculosis, good oral bioavailability, and comparable efficacy to isoniazid in infection models.
- Multi-region proteome analysis quantifies spatial heterogeneity of prostate tissue biomarkers
Application of pressure cycling technology and Sequential Windowed Acquisition of all THeoretical mass spectrometry allows quantifying the degree of intra-tumor heterogeneity of protein expression in prostate tumors. The data show that protein intra-tumor heterogeneity, if not characterized, may distort protein biomarker suitability in tumor tissues.