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IL-4 treatment induces apoptosis of blood monocytes and proliferation of recruited injury-associated macrophages to resolve liver injury

Pathways that favor the balance of immune cells toward those with healing potential offer therapeutic promise following injury. Here, Lynch at al. show that treatment with IL-4 expands pro-reparative macrophages through proliferation while driving concurrent death of their more inflammatory precursors, resulting in accelerated hepatic repair following acute liver injury.

Atypical Carcinoid of the Thymus: Early Diagnosis in a Case Report

Background: Atypical carcinoid of the thymus is an exceptionally rare neuroendocrine tumor originating from neuroendocrine cells within the thymus. These tumors often present with no symptoms or with nonspecific clinical signs, making early diagnosis particularly challenging. Despite their rarity, atypical carcinoids are clinically significant due to their aggressive nature and relatively poor prognosis. Early detection and appropriate management are therefore crucial to improving patient outcomes. Results: In this report, we present the case of a 64-year-old patient in whom an atypical carcinoid of the thymus was incidentally discovered following a thoracic computed tomography scan performed for unrelated reasons. Imaging revealed a suspicious anterior mediastinal mass, which was subsequently surgically resected.

Opportunities and challenges in applying microbiota to clinical cancer immunotherapy

Microbiota in clinical cancer immunotherapy.

Gut microbiota research has progressed from mechanistic studies to clinical trials, revealing strong potential to enhance cancer immunotherapy.

Fecal microbiota transplantation, single bacterial strains, and defined microbial consortia are in clinical testing; yet, standardization and implementation remain major challenges.

Donor selection, patient enrollment, microbiota implantation, antibiotic use, safety assessment, and endpoint evaluation each offer distinct opportunities and obstacles.

A ‘4D’ framework, enhancing diversity, diffusion, depth, and delicacy, can guide the optimization of microbiomebased immunotherapy. sciencenewshighlights ScienceMission https://sciencemission.com/microbiota-to-clinical-cancer


Fundamental research has elucidated the indispensable role of gut microbiota in modulating cancer immunotherapy efficacy. Despite promising preclinical findings, few related approaches have reached clinical trials. In this opinion, we provide insights based on current clinical trials using fecal microbiota transplant or specific bacterial strains as adjuvants to enhance immune checkpoint blockade therapy. We also systematically analyze the challenges in trial design, with a focus on donor selection, patient enrollment, implantation procedures, antibiotic use, safety assessment, and endpoint evaluation. Moving forward, we offer a comprehensive ‘4D’ framework (diversity, diffusion, depth, and delicacy) for accelerating the bench-to-bedside translation.

Oxidative stress-induced astrocytic collagen biosynthesis drives glial barrier formation and neuronal death in ischemic stroke

Online now: Lee et al. demonstrate that oxidative stress reprograms astrocytes to produce collagen through glycosylation-dependent mechanisms, driving glial barrier formation and progressive neuronal death after stroke. Targeting this pathway disrupts the glial barrier, prevents neurodegeneration, and improves functional recovery. A drug candidate, KDS12025, shows a potent effect in a non-human primate stroke model.

Group averages obscure how an individual’s brain controls behavior, study finds

Studying cognition by averaging data from many people’s brain scans hides how individuals use their brains, new Stanford Medicine research has shown. In particular, children who struggle with goal-oriented tasks show distinct patterns of brain activity when their data is analyzed individually, rather than as part of a group of kids with mixed abilities. The findings, which have implications for understanding how the brain works in such conditions as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, will be published April 27 in Nature Communications.

“Investigating how dynamics unfold within individual brains can provide significant insights into the neuroscience of individual differences and help us tackle questions that cannot be answered using conventional approaches,” said Percy Mistry, Ph.D., a research scholar in psychiatry and behavioral sciences, and a lead author of the study.

Mistry shares lead authorship with Nicholas Branigan, MS, a research data analyst in psychiatry and behavioral sciences. The senior author is Vinod Menon, Ph.D., a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and the Rachael L. and Walter F. Nichols, MD, Professor.

AI tool may spot ADHD years before children are diagnosed

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) affects millions of children, yet many go years without a diagnosis, missing the chance for early support that can change long-term outcomes even when early signs are present. In a new study, Duke Health researchers found that artificial intelligence tools can analyze routine electronic health records to accurately estimate a child’s risk of developing ADHD years before a typical diagnosis. By reviewing patterns in everyday medical data, the approach could help flag children who may benefit from earlier evaluation and follow-up.

The research, published in Nature Mental Health, highlights how powerful insights can come from information already collected during regular health care visits to help support early decision making by primary care providers.

“We have this incredibly rich source of information sitting in electronic health records,” said Elliot Hill, lead author of the study and data scientist in the Department of Biostatistics & Bioinformatics at Duke University School of Medicine.

Global genetic interaction network of a human cell maps conserved principles and informs functional interpretation of gene co-essentiality profiles

Now online! CRISPR perturbation of ∼4 million gene pairs in human HAP1 cells maps ∼89,000 genetic interactions, revealing a hierarchical network that links genes to complexes, pathways, and cellular processes and elucidates the genes underlying cancer cell genetic dependencies.

Oncostatin-M ligand-based CAR-T therapy displays robust anti-tumor activity against osteosarcoma

CAR-T therapy has revolutionized treatments for many hematologic malignancies, but it has shown far less efficacy against solid tumors. One reason for this lower efficacy in solid tumors is increased antigen heterogeneity. This study utilizes a ligand-based CAR-T approach, which allows targeting of multiple receptors by a single ligand. A high expression of the ligand oncostatin M’s (OSM) receptors, oncostatin M receptor (OSMR), and/or leukemic inhibitory factor receptor (LIFR) were noted in osteosarcoma cell lines and patient samples. Osteosarcoma is a bone cancer where treatment options have been stagnant for close to 40 years. Thus, this study explores the therapeutic potential of OSM ligand-based CAR-T cells against osteosarcoma.

Third-generation CAR-T cells expressing human OSM on their surface were created, with the surface expression of OSM confirmed by flow cytometry. Co-incubation of OSM CARs and osteosarcoma in vitro was performed, with cell death assessed via Incucyte and PI detection by flow cytometry. CAR-Ts were injected i.v. into mice with osteosarcoma cell line xenografts, and metastatic osteosarcoma. New patient-derived samples were tested for OSMR and LIFR expression and vulnerability to OSM CAR T cells. A new PDX model (named KKOS) from a patient with metastatic treatment-resistant osteosarcoma was characterized and tested for its susceptibility to OSM CAR T cells. All cytotoxic in vivo experiments were performed with n =3–6 mice per group per experiment.

OSM-CAR-T cells displayed cytotoxicity against osteosarcoma cell lines and patient samples expressing either one of OSM’s receptors in vitro and in vivo. Large increases in cytokine release, specifically IFNγ, were noted in a target-specific manner. One injection of OSM-CAR-T cells intravenously reduced tumor burden in two different mouse xenograft models. A similar anti-tumor effect was also noted in a metastatic model and a mouse model with multiple implanted KKOS tumors.

This ultracold quantum device turns electricity into something far stranger that could unlock sound-based lasers

Researchers at McGill University have developed a novel device that generates sound-like particles known as phonons at extremely cold temperatures. The technology could be used to create phonon lasers, with possible applications in communications and medical diagnostics.

“Modern communication is largely based on light, including electromagnetic waves and electrical currents. In a medium such as oceans, sound can travel, whereas light and electrical currents cannot,” said Michael Hilke. “In the human body, sound waves can also be a useful tool.”

Hilke is Associate Professor of Physics and co-author of the study published in Physical Review Letters. The device was built and analyzed at McGill and the National Research Council of Canada. The material was synthesized at Princeton University.

At just four nanometers thick, this metal starts behaving in a way physicists did not expect

Researchers in the University of Minnesota Twin Cities have discovered a powerful new way to control the electronic behavior of a metal—by manipulating the atomic properties of materials where they meet. The study, published in Nature Communications, demonstrates that interfacial polarization can tune the surface work function of metallic ruthenium dioxide (RuO2) by more than 1 electron volt (eV)—a tiny amount of energy—simply by adjusting film thickness at the nanometer scale.

“We often think of polarization as something that belongs to insulators or ferroelectrics—not metals,” said Bharat Jalan, professor and Shell Chair in the Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science at the University of Minnesota. “Our work shows that, through careful interface design, you can stabilize polarization in a metallic system and use it as a knob to tune electronic properties. This opens an entirely new way of thinking about controlling metals.”

This specific change is most powerful when the metal layer is about 4 nanometers thick—roughly the width of a single strand of DNA. At this precise size, the metal shifts from being “stretched” by the material underneath it to a more “relaxed” state. This transition proves that the physical way atoms are packed together has a direct, measurable impact on how the metal handles electricity.

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