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| Open AccessEnhancing NSCLC recurrence prediction with PET/CT habitat imaging, ctDNA, and integrative radiogenomics-blood insights
Predicting recurrence risk in non small cell lung cancer can help to guide treatment decisions. Here, the authors use CT and PET imaging to develop predictive imaging subtypes, which can be integrated with existing ctDNA methods to predict recurrence.
- Sheeba J. Sujit
- , Muhammad Aminu
- & Jia Wu
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Article
| Open AccessDeficiency of the HGF/Met pathway leads to thyroid dysgenesis by impeding late thyroid expansion
The mechanisms of bifurgation, a key step in thyroid development, are largely unknown. Here, Fang et al. find that HGF/Met is indispensable for the bifurgation of the thyroid primordium during zebrafish thyroid development.
- Ya Fang
- , Jia-Ping Wan
- & Huai-Dong Song
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Article
| Open AccessMultisensory flicker modulates widespread brain networks and reduces interictal epileptiform discharges
Repetitive audio-visual stimulation, or sensory flicker, can modulate oscillations in a non-invasive manner. Here the authors demonstrate the potential of flicker in individuals with epilepsy undergoing intracranial seizure monitoring.
- Lou T. Blanpain
- , Eric R. Cole
- & Annabelle C. Singer
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Article
| Open AccessSpatiotemporal immune atlas of a clinical-grade gene-edited pig-to-human kidney xenotransplant
Xenotransplantation in humans using pig organs could improve the transplant organ supply. Here the authors transplant pig kidneys into a brain-dead recipient and monitor the human immune cell response early after transplantation using spatial and single cell transcriptomics and show early myeloid cell infiltration.
- Matthew D. Cheung
- , Rebecca Asiimwe
- & Paige M. Porrett
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| Open AccessEarly-life exercise induces immunometabolic epigenetic modification enhancing anti-inflammatory immunity in middle-aged male mice
Exercise could affect the immune system, but whether early-life exercise could benefit immune health in adulthood is not fully understood. Here the authors show that early-life exercise promotes epi-metabolic changes in the liver to potentially benefit immunity in older age and characterise the involvement of pipecolic acid in this process.
- Nini Zhang
- , Xinpei Wang
- & Feng Gao
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Article
| Open AccessImmunoglobulin G N-glycan markers of accelerated biological aging during chronic HIV infection
In this study, Giron et al. find that people living with chronic HIV experience accelerated aging-associated alterations in antibody glycans. These alterations, attributed to senescence enzymes, predict comorbidities and reduce the antiviral function of antibodies.
- Leila B. Giron
- , Qin Liu
- & Mohamed Abdel-Mohsen
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Article
| Open AccessAntigen-specific Fab profiling achieves molecular-resolution analysis of human autoantibody repertoires in rheumatoid arthritis
Although many autoimmune diseases are characterized by the presence of autoantibodies, complete characterisation of autoantibody repertoires is lacking. Here, the authors introduce an autoantigen-specific Fab profiling method to show that the autoantibody repertoire in rheumatoid arthritis is diverse yet dominated only by a few clones.
- Eva Maria Stork
- , Danique M. H. van Rijswijck
- & Albert Bondt
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Article
| Open AccessThe genomic evolutionary dynamics and global circulation patterns of respiratory syncytial virus
This study on respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) reveals global genomic gaps. Using INFORM-RSV data, it uncovers selection’s impact on RSVA and RSVB diversity. Analysing full genomes, it highlights non-neutral epidemic processes. The research emphasises air travel’s influence on global spread, underscoring the need for comprehensive RSV genomic surveillance.
- Annefleur C. Langedijk
- , Bram Vrancken
- & Shabir A. Madhi
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Comment
| Open AccessReporting outcome comparisons by sex in oncology clinical trials
Many aspects of human health and disease are influenced by sex as a biological variable and gender as a social construct. A recent study from Nature Communications reported the landscape of outcome comparisions by sex in oncology clinical trials, highlighting the need for a more thorough reporting of sex differences.
- Guo Zhao
- , Yuning Wang
- & Ning Li
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Article
| Open AccessMolecular patterns of resistance to immune checkpoint blockade in melanoma
A large fraction of patients with melanoma still does not benefit from immune checkpoint blockade, associated with both primary and acquired resistance. Here the authors report genetic and immunological patterns of resistance in patients with melanoma after progression on anti-CTLA4 or anti-PD1 monotherapy.
- Martin Lauss
- , Bengt Phung
- & Göran Jönsson
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Article
| Open AccessDHX9 maintains epithelial homeostasis by restraining R-loop-mediated genomic instability in intestinal stem cells
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is featured with epithelial barrier dysfunction, however, the underlying mechanism is less clear. Here, the authors show that DHX9 deficiency in intestinal stem cells (ISCs) induces accumulation of abnormal R-loops and subsequent genomic instability, leading to impairment of ISCs and development of IBD.
- Xingxing Ren
- , Qiuyuan Liu
- & Shu Zhu
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Article
| Open AccessSARS-CoV-2-specific cellular and humoral immunity after bivalent BA.4/5 COVID-19-vaccination in previously infected and non-infected individuals
Prior infection or exposure to SARS-CoV-2 may influence immunogenicity and effectiveness of subsequent vaccination to new strains of virus. Here the authors show that immunogenicity of a BA.4/5 mRNA vaccine differed in recipients depending on whether they had been exposed to or infected with an earlier strain of virus.
- Rebecca Urschel
- , Saskia Bronder
- & Martina Sester
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Article
| Open AccessImmunoregulatory role of the gut microbiota in inflammatory depression
Inflammatory depression is a treatment-resistant subtype of depression. Here, the authors show that patients with inflammatory depression exhibit a disrupted microbiota, which upon FMT in mice leads to increased peripheral and central inflammatory factors, intestinal mucosal permeability, and depressive and anxiety-like behaviors. Probiotic administration ameliorates the disease phenotype.
- Penghong Liu
- , Zhifen Liu
- & Kerang Zhang
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Article
| Open AccessComparative characterization of the infant gut microbiome and their maternal lineage by a multi-omics approach
Here, the authors employ multi-omics on a cohort comprising three generations of family members, showing that fecal microbiota populations, functions, and metabolome of infants vary greatly from their maternal lineage, exhibiting a less diverse microbiota and differences in various metabolite classes including short- and branched-chain fatty acids.
- Tomás Clive Barker-Tejeda
- , Elisa Zubeldia-Varela
- & Alma Villaseñor
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Article
| Open AccessDermal injury drives a skin to gut axis that disrupts the intestinal microbiome and intestinal immune homeostasis in mice
The microbial community in the intestine can affect other organs such as the skin but it is not clear if the opposite can occur. Here the authors show that skin wounding affects the microbial composition of the intestinal flora which then enhances DSS induced colitis and intestinal inflammation.
- Tatsuya Dokoshi
- , Yang Chen
- & Richard L. Gallo
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Article
| Open AccessIntegration of pathologic characteristics, genetic risk and lifestyle exposure for colorectal cancer survival assessment
Risk prediction for prognosis in colorectal cancer is an important tool. Here, the authors utilise GWAS from 5 cohorts of colorectal cancer patients, and show a healthy lifestyle is associated with a 7.6% improvement in overall survival among patients with high pathologic and genetic risk.
- Junyi Xin
- , Dongying Gu
- & Meilin Wang
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Article
| Open Accessp53 promotes revival stem cells in the regenerating intestine after severe radiation injury
The tumor suppressor p53 is the guardian of the genome. Here, the authors use comprehensive approaches to demonstrate that transient p53 activity induces revival stem cells to promote the regeneration of severely irradiated intestinal epithelium in mice.
- Clara Morral
- , Arshad Ayyaz
- & David G. Kirsch
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Article
| Open AccessAccelerated DNA replication fork speed due to loss of R-loops in myelodysplastic syndromes with SF3B1 mutation
Here the authors find that erythroblasts of myelodysplastic syndromes with SF3B1 mutation leading to inefficient erythropoiesis show DNA replication stress with accelerated forks and reduced R-loops. Restoring R-loops by a histone deacetylase inhibitor rescues erythroid differentiation.
- David Rombaut
- , Carine Lefèvre
- & Michaela Fontenay
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Article
| Open AccessThe secreted protein Amuc_1409 from Akkermansia muciniphila improves gut health through intestinal stem cell regulation
Microbiome-secreted proteins act as key modulators of host-microbiome crosstalk. Here, the authors show that Amuc_1409 protein, secreted from Akkermansia muciniphila, plays a key role in intestinal homeostasis by regulating intestinal stem cells through interaction with E-cadherin, indicating its potential as a biomolecule for improving gut health.
- Eun-Jung Kang
- , Jae-Hoon Kim
- & Chul-Ho Lee
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Article
| Open AccessPaternal dietary macronutrient balance and energy intake drive metabolic and behavioral differences among offspring
The dietary factors causing varying intergenerational responses are not fully identified. Here, the authors show that the relative proportion of protein, fats, and carbohydrates in paternal diets before conception differentially influences the phenotype of the next-generation offspring on energy metabolism and behaviour.
- Angela Jane Crean
- , Alistair McNair Senior
- & Stephen James Simpson
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Article
| Open AccessGadd45g insufficiency drives the pathogenesis of myeloproliferative neoplasms
Different gene mutations have been reported as drivers for myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN). Here, the authors show that Gadd45g insufficiency induces MPN in mouse models and associates with MPN in patients.
- Peiwen Zhang
- , Na You
- & Xiaotong Ma
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Article
| Open AccessTargeting pathogenic CD8+ tissue-resident T cells with chimeric antigen receptor therapy in murine autoimmune cholangitis
CD8 + T cells play an important role in primary biliary cholangitis (PBC). In this study, the authors demonstrate that PD-1-expressing CD8+ liver-resident T cells are pathogenic in murine PBC and that targeting these cells using a chimaeric antigen receptor reduces disease severity.
- Hao-Xian Zhu
- , Shu-Han Yang
- & Zhe-Xiong Lian
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Article
| Open AccessSenescent-like macrophages mediate angiogenesis for endplate sclerosis via IL-10 secretion in male mice
In their previous study, the researchers systematically revealed that endplate sclerosis is a significant aspect of spine degeneration or aging and a primary source of spinal pain. However, the underlying mechanisms of endplate sclerosis remained unclear. In their current report, it is shown that senescent cells accumulate in the sclerotic endplates of lumbar spine instability (LSI) or aging mouse models. The clearance of these senescent cells was found to restrain angiogenesis coupled with endplate sclerosis. Notably, macrophages were identified as undergoing senescence in the sclerotic endplates. The specific knockout of cdkn2a (p16) in macrophages abrogated LSI or aging-induced angiogenesis and sclerosis in the endplates. Moreover, both in vivo and in vitro studies indicated that IL-10 mediates the effects of senescent macrophages on angiogenesis and sclerosis in the endplates. Overall, these findings suggest that senescent macrophages orchestrate angiogenesis coupling with endplate sclerosis via the IL-10/pSTAT3 axis. This study enhances the understanding of the connection between immune senescence and endplate sclerosis and uncovers senescent macrophage-initiated endplate sclerosis as potential therapeutic targets for spinal degeneration.
- Yonggang Fan
- , Weixin Zhang
- & Shuangfei Ni
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Article
| Open AccessThe recent rapid expansion of multidrug resistant Ural lineage Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Moldova
Chitwood et al. report on the rapid expansion of a Ural-lineage multidrug resistant strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Moldova. This strain has an estimated reproduction number more than two times greater than otherwise similar drug susceptible strains.
- Melanie H. Chitwood
- , Caroline Colijn
- & Benjamin Sobkowiak
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Article
| Open AccessConcomitant medication, comorbidity and survival in patients with breast cancer
Preliminary epidemiological evidence suggests that some non-cancer medications may affect breast cancer risk, recurrence, and survival. In this study, the authors utilized a nationwide database of breast cancer patients to estimate the association between frequently used drugs taken prior to diagnosis and breast cancer prognosis. And they identified 16 drugs associated with breast cancer outcomes.
- Elise Dumas
- , Beatriz Grandal Rejo
- & Anne-Sophie Hamy
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Article
| Open AccessStatins improve cardiac endothelial function to prevent heart failure with preserved ejection fraction through upregulating circRNA-RBCK1
Endothelial dysfunction has been shown to occur in HFpEF and we know that statins can target endothelial dysfunction by inhibiting miR-133a. Here the authors show that statins improve diastolic dysfunction in HFpEF by increasing the levels of a circRNA which, in turns, binds to miR-133a modulating its downstream targets.
- Bin Li
- , Wen-Wu Bai
- & Shuang-Xi Wang
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Article
| Open AccessOrigin and dispersal history of Hepatitis B virus in Eastern Eurasia
Hepatitis B virus is an ancient human pathogen that dates back more than 10,000 years. Here, the authors investigate the evolutionary history of the virus in Eastern Eurasia by sequencing 34 genomes dating from approximately 400–5,000 years ago and comparing them with other contemporary sequences.
- Bing Sun
- , Aida Andrades Valtueña
- & Yinqiu Cui
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Article
| Open AccessPlasma brain-derived tau is an amyloid-associated neurodegeneration biomarker in Alzheimer’s disease
The authors investigated associations of brain-derived-tau (BD-tau) with Aβ pathology, changes in cognition and MRI signatures. Staging Aβ-pathology according to neurodegeneration, using BD-tau, identifies individuals at risk of near-term cognitive decline and atrophy.
- Fernando Gonzalez-Ortiz
- , Bjørn-Eivind Kirsebom
- & Kaj Blennow
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Article
| Open AccessVISTA checkpoint inhibition by pH-selective antibody SNS-101 with optimized safety and pharmacokinetic profiles enhances PD-1 response
VISTA is a pH-dependent inhibitory checkpoint for T-cells that is abundant on myeloid lineage cells and antagonists of VISTA may successfully reinvigorate anti-tumour immunity. Here, the authors show that the antibody SNS-101, which is currently being investigated in humans in a clinical trial, is characterized by pH-sensitivity that endows it with favorable pharmacokinetic and safety profiles, and enhanced therapeutic effect when combined with PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors.
- Thomas Thisted
- , F. Donelson Smith
- & Edward H. van der Horst
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Article
| Open AccessA population-based cohort study of longitudinal change of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol impact on gastrointestinal cancer risk
High-density Lipoprotein Cholesterol (HDL-C) levels have been associated with cancer. Here, the authors show the association between longitudinal changes of HDL-C and risk of gastrointestinal cancer in a patients.
- Su Youn Nam
- , Junwoo Jo
- & Chang-Min Cho
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Article
| Open AccessBat species assemblage predicts coronavirus prevalence
Human encroachment into nature alters species communities and can lead to changes in disease dynamics. Here, Meyer et al. find that coronavirus prevalence increased in less diverse bat communities, which were dominated by susceptible host species.
- Magdalena Meyer
- , Dominik W. Melville
- & Simone Sommer
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Article
| Open AccessMesenchymal glioma stem cells trigger vasectasia—distinct neovascularization process stimulated by extracellular vesicles carrying EGFR
Vasectasia is a newly described, non-angiogenic form of blood vessel formation induced by mesenchymal glioblastoma cells, and driven by endothelial cell responses to extracellular vesicles containing oncogenic EGFR.
- Cristiana Spinelli
- , Lata Adnani
- & Janusz Rak
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Article
| Open AccessCold-induced FOXO1 nuclear transport aids cold survival and tissue storage
How tissues adapt to extreme cold is not well understood. Here, the authors discover a mechanism that promotes FOXO1-mediated cold survival gene transcription at low temperatures, with potential implications for long-term tissue storage for transplantation.
- Xiaomei Zhang
- , Lihao Ge
- & Jingxing Ou
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Article
| Open AccessIn-depth correlation analysis between tear glucose and blood glucose using a wireless smart contact lens
The correlation between tear glucose and blood glucose is still controversial. Here, the authors demonstrated the correlation between tear glucose and blood glucose in both animal models and human subjects using smart contact lenses.
- Wonjung Park
- , Hunkyu Seo
- & Jang-Ung Park
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Article
| Open AccessTargeting branched N-glycans and fucosylation sensitizes ovarian tumors to immune checkpoint blockade
Cancer cells can employ aberrant glycosylation patterns to evade the host immune response. Here the authors report that inhibition of branched N-glycans sensitizes homologous recombination (HR)-proficient, but not HR-deficient, epithelial ovarian cancer to immune checkpoint inhibitors.
- Hao Nie
- , Pratima Saini
- & Rugang Zhang
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Article
| Open AccessMaternal hybrid immunity and risk of infant COVID-19 hospitalizations: national case-control study in Israel
Maternal anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies can provide protection against severe COVID-19 in infants, but the relative protection conferred by maternal infection, vaccination, and hybrid immunity is unknown. Here, the authors use data from Israel and show that infants born to mothers with hybrid immunity had lowest rates of COVID-19 hospitalisation.
- Joshua Guedalia
- , Michal Lipschuetz
- & Ofer Beharier
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Article
| Open AccessIncident allergic diseases in post-COVID-19 condition: multinational cohort studies from South Korea, Japan and the UK
SARS-CoV-2 infection has been linked to various persistent or new-onset health consequences, including disruption of the immune system. Here, the authors investigate the risk of new-onset allergic diseases following SARS-CoV-2 infection using data from South Korea, Japan, and the UK.
- Jiyeon Oh
- , Myeongcheol Lee
- & Dong Keon Yon
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Article
| Open AccessDupilumab-associated head and neck dermatitis shows a pronounced type 22 immune signature mediated by oligoclonally expanded T cells
Dupilumab-associated head and neck dermatitis has been described in a subset of patients treated with the IL4R-blocker dupilumab. Here the authors characterise the immune cell composition and single-cell transcriptome in comparison with untreated forms of atopic dermatitis in a small cohort showing increases in IL-22-associated genes.
- Christine Bangert
- , Natalia Alkon
- & Patrick M. Brunner
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Article
| Open AccessEarly detection of emerging viral variants through analysis of community structure of coordinated substitution networks
Rise of new viral strains is a major public health challenge, demanding advanced detection and forecasting methods. This study shows how examining communities within networks of viral mutations enables early detection of emerging strains.
- Fatemeh Mohebbi
- , Alex Zelikovsky
- & Pavel Skums
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Article
| Open AccessInvolution of brown adipose tissue through a Syntaxin 4 dependent pyroptosis pathway
Aging, chronic high-fat diet feeding, or housing at thermoneutrality induces brown adipose tissue (BAT) involution. Here, the authors demonstrate that physiologic aging induced involution and thermogenic dysfunction result from pyroptotic signalling activation.
- Xiaofan Yu
- , Gabrielle Benitez
- & Daorong Feng
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Article
| Open AccessSystematic analysis of RNA-binding proteins identifies targetable therapeutic vulnerabilities in osteosarcoma
Proteomic, transcriptomic, and genomic analysis has shown osteosarcoma (OS) to be a complex and heterogenous disease but revealed little about its carcinogenesis or potential therapeutic targets. Here, the authors profile the RNA interactome, transcriptome and proteome of cells derived from OS patients, identifying a targetable vulnerability to translation inhibition.
- Yang Zhou
- , Partho Sarothi Ray
- & Andreas E. Kulozik
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Article
| Open AccessIntrathecal delivery of adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells in traumatic spinal cord injury: Phase I trial
In the CELLTOP Phase I trial, stem cells were harvested from patients with spinal cord injury and injected into their central nervous system after processing. The procedure was safe, with no reported serious adverse events during the 2-year follow-up period.
- Mohamad Bydon
- , Wenchun Qu
- & Allan B. Dietz
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Article
| Open AccessDysregulation of Wnt/β-catenin signaling contributes to intestinal inflammation through regulation of group 3 innate lymphoid cells
RORγt+ group 3 innate lymphoid cells are intimately involved in intestinal homeostasis, their dysregulation is linked to inflammatory gut diseases. Here the authors show that dysregulated Wnt/β-catenin signalling contributes to disturbed regulation of group 3 innate cells and intestinal inflammation.
- Jiacheng Hao
- , Chang Liu
- & Xiaohuan Guo
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Article
| Open AccessA negative feedback loop between TET2 and leptin in adipocyte regulates body weight
The epigenetic regulation in adipocytes during obesity remains poorly understood. Here, the authors demonstrate a negative feedback loop between TET2, a DNA demethylation enzyme, and leptin, an adipokine, in adipocytes, unveiling a compensatory mechanism by which the body counteracts the metabolic dysfunction induced by obesity.
- Qin Zeng
- , Jianfeng Song
- & Tuo Deng
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Article
| Open AccessData-driven identification of predictive risk biomarkers for subgroups of osteoarthritis using interpretable machine learning
Osteoarthritis can be caused by multiple biological mechanisms but the drivers of disease risk are not well understood. Here, the authors use data from UK Biobank in machine learning models to identify clinical and biological markers associated with development of osteoarthritis and identify sub-groups with different risk profiles.
- Rikke Linnemann Nielsen
- , Thomas Monfeuga
- & Ramneek Gupta
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Article
| Open AccessGenetic associations of protein-coding variants in venous thromboembolism
Here, the authors perform a large exome-wide study for venous thromboembolism and identify 18 potential risk genes, including 4 new genes, revealing a significant role of rare coding variants, and offering insights into genetic risk factors.
- Xiao-Yu He
- , Bang-Sheng Wu
- & Jin-Tai Yu
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Article
| Open AccessDeciphering the spatial landscape and plasticity of immunosuppressive fibroblasts in breast cancer
The heterogeneity of cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) in breast cancer has been previously described. Here the authors provide further insights into the spatial landscape and plasticity of immunosuppressive fibroblasts in breast cancer.
- Hugo Croizer
- , Rana Mhaidly
- & Fatima Mechta-Grigoriou
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Article
| Open AccessClinically used broad-spectrum antibiotics compromise inflammatory monocyte-dependent antibacterial defense in the lung
Authors utilise a murine model of infection to provide mechanistic insight into how antimicrobial therapy may be a predisposing risk factor for hospital-acquired pneumonia. They show that antibiotic-induced microbiota perturbations compromise inflammatory monocytes and thereby impair antibacterial defence.
- Patrick J. Dörner
- , Harithaa Anandakumar
- & Bastian Opitz
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Article
| Open AccessThe CHK1 inhibitor prexasertib in BRCA wild-type platinum-resistant recurrent high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma: a phase 2 trial
ATR/CHK1 pathway inhibitors represent a therapeutic option for platinum-resistant high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC). Here the authors report the results of a phase 2 clinical study of the CHK1 inhibitor prexasertib in patients with BRCA wild-type platinum-resistant HGSOC with or without biopsiable disease.
- Elena Giudice
- , Tzu-Ting Huang
- & Jung-Min Lee