Show newer

"Here, we utilized unbiased genetic screens to map drug/gene interactions for a variety of clinically approved therapies used in the treatment of AML. This effort highlighted a unique genetic relationship between response to venetoclax and the function of specific RNA splicing factors."

cell.com/cancer-cell/fulltext/

For , an episode of the that aired this summer:

Orian Shirihai tells the story of a classic @embojournal paper on the mitochondrial life cycle.

The episode, "Fuse or Die" highlights the importance of my personal nemesis, the well-organised lab notebook.

embo.org/podcasts/fuse-or-die-

The latest episode of the is out today.

@tlemberger and I spoke with the Editor in Chief of BMJ Open, Adrian Aldcroft about , and @ReviewCommons

A focus of the episode were the challenges clinical research present to and preprints.

You can listen to it on the link below or on pretty much any podcast app we've tried so far (if you can't find it on your podcast app, please let us know which one you're using).

embo.org/podcasts/peer-review-

"The famed Copenhagen eatery, renowned as much for its culinary innovation as for its lively insect ingredients, has taken food condiments to new heights with its first microbe-made ‘garum’. Ancient Romans were said to go wild for this salty fish sauce and doused every possible meal with it, a bit like ketchup aficionados. Romans made garum by fermenting fish viscera in large, open vessels under the Mediterranean sun for up to three months. Many chefs have attempted to resurrect this so-called dodo of gastronomic history, with limited success — until now. Noma’s version, however, has no fish at all."

nature.com/articles/s41587-022

My latest clinical pipeline column for Nature Medicine is a look at a drug recently approved by the to delay the onset of type 1 diabetes.

It's a direct descendant of the very first monoclonal ever approved for clinical use.

nature.com/articles/d41591-022

👏 👏 👏

"A life-size bronze statue of Henrietta Lacks, the woman whose cancer cells were taken without her consent and were used for research that ushered medical discoveries and treatments, will be erected in her hometown, Roanoke, Va., next year in a plaza previously named after the Confederate general Robert E. Lee."

nytimes.com/2022/12/20/us/henr

"The virus-neutralizing activity of antibodies can be readily defined in robust in vitro assays and in passive transfer experiments. But to what degree vaccination-induced humoral immune responses prevent infection and pathogen replication also in humans, and therefore serve as indicators or even correlates of sterilizing immunity, cannot be easily established."

Wahl & Wardemann on (from Oct).

cell.com/immunity/fulltext/S10

Quinta dos Abibes Sauvignon Blanc, from Bairrada (near Coimbra). A small winery that we visited couple of years ago, I think this was the last bottle (they make a great sparkling, but those are long gone).
cc @BLMG

Great picture, from the NYT's "Year in Illustration" recap.
By Aleia Murawski and Sam Copeland for "Apocalypse When? Global Warming’s Endless Scroll"

nytimes.com/interactive/2022/1

"William Hogarth’s Satire on False Perspective (1754), engraved by Luke Sullivan, offers an Escher-like array of impossible lines and vanishing points: a man lights his pipe from a distant candle; a flock of sheep grow bigger as they recede round a corner; a foreground flag disappears behind a distant tree, and many more."

publicdomainreview.org/collect

This is such an important point in the comparative study of Toll like receptors and immunity across taxa: the prototypical Toll is *not* a microbial/foreign pattern recognition receptor, it is only activated by a host molecule.

"The Drosophila Toll receptor differs from the mammalian TLRs in that the Drosophila Toll receptor functions as a cytokine receptor (reviewed in Ref. 5), whereas the mammalian TLRs recognize foreign structures directly and thus are pattern recognition receptors (PRRs)."

journals.aai.org/jimmunol/arti

'Es una pequeña pieza de bronce, no más grande que una bola de billar. Un poliedro de 12 caras que, en cada vértice, luce un pequeño remate redondo, como una esfera. En cada uno de sus planos hay tallado un agujero, y cada uno de estos agujeros resulta de distinto tamaño. Suena misterioso, y lo es. De los llamados dodecaedros romanos, de hecho, ni siquiera se sabe si tienen su origen en Roma. Ninguna referencia escrita alude a ellos, lo cual dificulta muchísimo interpretar qué lugar ocuparon en la sociedad cuando estos fueron aleados.'

elpais.com/icon-design/2022-12

"According to the art historian Charles Colbert, the usual practice of painters in this period ‘was to let the horizon fade into visual and conceptual insignificance’. But in Homer the horizon does not recede; it pitches forward, towards our world."

Elisa Tamarkin on at @lrb

lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v44/n24/el

"Differing from its predecessor, ENLIGHT has been designed and evaluated with two real-world clinical scenarios in mind: personalized oncology, where one matches the best treatment to a patient based on a fixed decision threshold, and CTD, where the goal is to a priori exclude non-responding patients in the best possible manner. "

cell.com/med/fulltext/S2666-63

"Ambiguity"?

'(...) in QAnon circles, Musk’s ambiguity and plausible deniability have been seen as a strategic way for him to subtly push their dogma into the mainstream. A QAnon-boosting account with 165,000 followers on Truth Social, Trump’s social network, wrote Monday: “At this rate, Elon is on pace to start posting Q drops to millions of normies and there’s nothing anyone can do to stop him.”'

washingtonpost.com/technology/

Cancer, extrachromosomal DNA, and gene amplification

'Boosting the production of a protein is usually achieved by increasing transcription rates, but special cases can involve directly creating more copies of the associated gene (Stark and Wahl, 1984). This phenomenon was first identified in amphibian eggs, where it helps cells to produce the elements required for protein synthesis (see Tobler, 1975 for review).'

elifesciences.org/articles/846

Show older
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.