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03
Jul
2023
‘Traffic control’ system for mucin and insulin secretion identified

Findings shed light on how cells secrete just the right amount of the two proteins crucial for human health

RESEARCH
27
Jun
2023
Researchers reveal how cells rewrite their fate

Findings can lead to new strategies to accelerate or manipulate the molecular mechanisms involved to target cancer
 

RESEARCH
01
Jun
2023
DNA damage repaired by antioxidant enzymes

In crisis, the nucleus calls antioxidant enzymes to the rescue. This indicates metabolic activity, which would be a profound paradigm shift with implications for cancer research.

RESEARCH
24
Apr
2023
Differentiation landscape of acute myeloid leukemia charted with new tool

The findings pave the way for the development of new techniques to predict how AML patients will respond to chemotherapy.

RESEARCH
06
Apr
2023
Controversial beta cell origin theory challenged by diabetes experts

Dr. Jorge Ferrer challenges the view that adult mice form new beta cells which arise from pancreatic duct cells

RESEARCH
06
Apr
2023
tRNA biomarkers for cancer diagnosis and prognosis enabled by new method

The new method can lead to earlier detection of diseases and improved patient outcomes

RESEARCH
30
Mar
2023
Epigenome mapped in detail across human body

International team of CRG, Harvard, Yale, MIT, CSHL and Johns Hopkins publish personalised epigenomes of four individuals in Cell

RESEARCH
07
Mar
2023
Heart toggles between maintenance and energy-boost mode using ribosomes

New mechanism found which can be exploited to prevent or heal damage to the heart 

RESEARCH
13
Feb
2023
Seasonal and circadian genetic variation charted across the human body

Atlas of circadian and circannual variation reveals therapeutic targets which could benefit from different doses depending on time of day and season

RESEARCH
09
Feb
2023
The image shows pancreatic islets in mice, specialised tissues that host beta cells. On the left, a healthy pancreatic islet is shown with its typical morphology with alpha cells in the periphery and beta cells in the core of the islet. On the right, mice with a mutation in Srrm3 that knock out the cells’ ability to regulate microexon inclusion results in islets with altered morphology and cell identity. This and other functional alterations ultimately impacts on the release of insulin. Jonas Juan Mateu
‘Tiny but mighty’ gene fragments are crucial for maintaining blood sugar levels

Microexons constitute new potential therapeutic targets for treating diabetes

RESEARCH

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