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Light-directed evolution of dynamic, multi-state, and computational protein functionalities

Now online! Optovolution leverages optogenetics and the yeast cell cycle to impose rapid, tunable selection, enabling the continuous evolution of light-responsive regulators, logic gates, and other complex protein behaviors that were previously difficult to evolve.

Upadacitinib for Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor–Related Dermatitis: A Nonrandomized Clinical Trial

This phase 2 nonrandomized clinical trial evaluated oral upadacitinib for severe immune checkpoint inhibitor–related dermatitis in patients with solid tumors.

Rash resolution to grade ≤1 was achieved in all participants within 28 days, and pruritus improvement was reported within 1 day of initiation. Upadacitinib was well tolerated, with no serious treatment-related adverse events.

The majority of patients were able to continue immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy as scheduled, indicating the potential of upadacitinib as a safe and effective option for managing severe Dermatitis induced by immunotherapy.


This nonrandomized clinical trial examines the safety and efficacy of oral upadacitinib in the treatment of patients with severe immune checkpoint inhibitor–related dermatitis.

Decoding alzheimer’s: The role of EEG rhythms and aperiodic components in cognitive decline

[Alzheimer’s disease: AD] Zhang et al.: “Increased theta band power was statistically significant in AD patients, highlighting its critical role in AD pathology.”


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Autosomal Dominant FTH1 Variant Causing Pontocerebellar Hypoplasia and Late-Onset NeuroferritinopathyA Case Report

ObjectivesWe report on a patient with a distinct clinical and neuroradiologic phenotype and a de novo variant in the FTH1 gene. MethodsThe patient was a 25-year-old woman with developmental delay and pontocerebellar hypoplasia, who after years of stable condition visited our hospital at age 20 years because of clinical deterioration. With consent from the patients’ family, we obtained clinical, imaging, and genetic data from the patient’s medical record.

A strategy of microglia replacement alleviates microgliopathy in a CSF1R I794T hotspot mutation mouse model of CSF1R-related disorder

Microglial replacement strategy to treat microgliopathy.

Colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R) gene mutation (I794T) is linked to primary microgliopathy manifesting as leukoencephalopathy.

The researchers define the clinical features of patients carrying the CSF1R p. I794T variant and establish a corresponding knockin mouse model.

The authors demonstrate that knockin mice exhibited hallmark features of CSF1R-related disorder (CSF1R-RD).

They show that Csf1rI792T/+ microglia adopt a disease associated state and that a microglial replacement strategy termed “duplicate-cyclic microglial depletion for transplantation” (DCMDT), mitigates cognitive and neuropathological deficits in CSF1R-RD. sciencenewshighlights ScienceMission https://sciencemission.com/microglia-replacement-18450


Li et al. define the clinical features of patients carrying the CSF1R p. I794T variant and establish a corresponding knockin mouse model. They show that Csf1rI792T/+ microglia adopt a disease-associated state and that a microglial replacement strategy, DCMDT, mitigates cognitive and neuropathological deficits in CSF1R-related disorder.

Mechanism of Viral DNA Packaging in Phage T4 Using Single-Molecule Fluorescence Approaches

📊 Research Summary: The ImmunoSep trial demonstrates the potential for biomarker-guided immunotherapy in a subset of patients with sepsis.


This trial assessed whether immunotherapy tailored to individual immune dysregulation—macrophage activation–like syndrome and sepsis-induced immunoparalysis—could improve organ function among patients with sepsis-3.

Triglycerides induce endoplasmic reticulum lipid bilayer stress to activate PERK and enhance antifungal immunity

Fungal infections present persistent therapeutic challenges in immunocompromised populations, including individuals with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), organ transplant recipients receiving immunosuppressive therapy, long-term hospitalized patients, patients with cancer, and those receiving immunomodulatory agents.1 These infections demonstrate remarkable recalcitrance to conventional therapies, compounded by fungal adaptability to environmental stresses, the emergence of drug-resistant strains, and the limited availability of clinically available antifungal agents.2 Systemic fungemia has alarmingly high mortality rates, accounting for approximately 1.5 million annual deaths worldwide, a burden comparable to AIDS-and tuberculosis-related mortality.3 Candida albicans is the most frequently isolated fungal pathogen in clinical settings. Despite therapeutic advances, invasive candidiasis persists with mortality rates exceeding 40%,4 underscoring the urgent need to elucidate host immune mechanisms against fungal pathogens.

When innate immune cells, such as macrophages, dendritic cells, and neutrophils, encounter fungi, the pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) on their surface recognize evolutionarily conserved fungal cell wall components, including β-glucan and α-mannan (classified as pathogen-associated molecular patterns), thereby initiating downstream signaling cascades and immune responses. The primary PRRs involved in fungal recognition are C-type lectin receptors (CLRs) and Toll-like receptors. The CLR family comprises Dectin-1 (specific for β-glucan), Dectin-2/3 (mannan sensors), Mincle, dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule-grabbing nonintegrin, and CD23.5 Upon ligand binding, CLRs initiate the phosphorylation of the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif within the Dectin-1 cytoplasmic tail and the recruitment of the Fc receptor γ-chain to Dectin-2 or Mincle, which serves as a docking site for spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK).

Circadian rhythm heterogeneity modulates drug response variations in neuroblastoma models

Ector et al. uncover circadian heterogeneity across neuroblastoma cell models and link rhythmic strength to drug sensitivity. Their findings suggest that circadian competence may influence treatment outcomes, pointing to chronotherapy as a potential avenue for improving pediatric cancer care.

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