Gene and Cell Therapy – News and Features
News
Cancer Cell “Memories” May Lead to Improved Lung Cancer Treatments
Research shows that some lung cancer cells retain a “memory” of the healthy cell where they came from — one that might be exploited to make an emerging type of lung cancer treatment called KRAS inhibition more effective.
News
Novel Microfluidic Method Optimizes Stem Cell Extraction for Advanced Cell Therapies
Traditional bone marrow aspirate (BMA) stem cell extraction methods are complex, time-consuming, and yield poor results due to antiquated centrifugation techniques.
News
Inability of Macrophages To Penetrate Tumors Could Explain Cell Therapy Failures
Macrophages, a type of white blood cell that can destroy invading pathogens, have an innate ability to infiltrate tumor cells, making them a potentially important tool in treatments that use transplanted cells to fight disease, known as cell therapy.
News
Disrupting One Gene in CAR T Cells Makes Them More Potent
Disrupting one gene in CAR T cells used for cancer therapy makes them more potent and able to fight the cancer for longer, reports a new study.
Industry Insight
Why the Time Is Now for Allogeneic Cell Therapies
Andrew Schulman explores why we need allogeneic therapies, the importance of collaboration to keep the momentum, and challenges and predictions for the future.
News
Genome’s “Master” Regulator Could Be Used To Enhance T-Cell Therapy
A single master regulator of the genome can be used to reprogram a network of thousands of genes in T cells and greatly enhance cancer cell killing.
News
Another MAIT Cell Superpower Uncovered
Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells don't obey the usual immune cell rules, and new research has revealed another "superpower" of this cell type.
News
A Breath of Fresh Air Is Key for Cell-Based Therapies
In 2021, a University-led research team received a contract worth up to $33 million to develop an implantable “living pharmacy” to control the human body’s sleep/wake cycles. Now, the researchers have completed a major step toward achieving this.
News
What Happens in a Virus Particle When the Temperature Is Raised?
Researchers at Lund University, together with colleagues at the NIST Synchrotron Facility in the USA, have mapped on an atomic level what happens in a virus particle when the temperature is raised.
News
Powerful Immune Cells Engineered for Potential “Off-the-Shelf” Cancer Therapy
Scientists have developed a new method to engineer more powerful immune cells that can potentially be used for “off-the-shelf” cell therapy to treat challenging cancers.
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