Novel tool can estimate number of T cells in cancer tumours
Researchers have developed a new method that can rapidly count the number of T cells in a tumour, helping to predict patient response to therapies.
List view / Grid view
Researchers have developed a new method that can rapidly count the number of T cells in a tumour, helping to predict patient response to therapies.
Drug analysis at the Francis Crick Institute and University of Dundee has revealed 15 potential antivirals that could lead to new COVID-19 treatments.
Researchers have found a protein that, when inhibited in mice with cancer, increased the response to immunotherapy.
Researchers have shown in fruit flies that lipid droplets could prevent the kidney damage that leads to chronic kidney disease.
Researchers have developed a set of compounds designed to stop the malaria parasite being able to burst out of red blood cells and replicate.
Scientists have said that researchers need to be more aware of unintended mutations to human embryos following CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing.
In this article, Drug Target Review’s Hannah Balfour discusses three of the latest developments in imaging for disease research and drug development.
Scientists observed that different cancers undergo the same genetic mutations at similar stages of evolution, the findings could become part of an ‘evolutionary rule book’ which would theoretically enable the prediction and prevention of cancer’s next evolutionary move.
The high-throughput screening (HTS) facility at the Francis Crick Institute in the UK provides a core service for Crick research groups. It enables scientists to use large-scale, unbiased screening technologies and approaches as part of their research. Nikki Withers spoke to the Science Technology Platform Head, Michael Howell, to hear…
More research into tuberculosis is now possible with the development of an optimisied mouse model that exhibits the same blood immune response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection as humans.
Scientists using a new motor neuron disease (MND) model have shown astrocytes may protect neurons from toxic TDP-43 protein aggregates in the early stages of disease.
Scientists have found that when two specific genes are deleted in benign tumour tissue in the intestines, it more rapidly develops into a tumour that is more likely to become cancerous.
Chemicals that attract specialised immune cells toward tumours could be used to develop better immunotherapies for cancer patients...
Statistical model pinpoints 27 novel genes thought to prevent cancer from forming...
Drugs developed to treat heart and blood vessel problems could be used to treat leukaemia...