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How nanomedicine gets inside your cells and treats you from the inside out

Canadians swallow millions of pills every day to treat common health issues like high blood pressure, high cholesterol and Type II diabetes, but scientists are working at the molecular level to turn patients’ cells into pharmacies.

Nanotechnology, where atoms and molecules are manipulated on a tiny scale—a billion times smaller than a meter—is already incorporated into everyday products like sunscreen, waterproof clothing and smartphones.

In nanomedicine, it’s being used to prompt RNA to make protein-based drugs to treat diseases. Now we can fine-tune protein production by dialing it up or down, creating personalized medicine on an invisible scale.

Nanobody repairs misfolded CFTR inside cells, boosting function in cystic fibrosis

A tiny antibody component could fundamentally transform the treatment of cystic fibrosis: For the first time, researchers have succeeded in developing a so-called nanobody that penetrates directly into human cells and can repair the chloride channel most commonly affected in cystic fibrosis. The innovative therapeutic approach was developed in collaboration between teams from Charité—Universitätsmedizin Berlin and the Leibniz-Forschungsinstitut für Molekulare Pharmakologie (FMP). The results have now been published in the journal Nature Chemical Biology.

The clinical picture of cystic fibrosis—also known as CF—is caused by genetic defects in the so-called CFTR channel. This channel regulates water and salt transport in the lung mucosa and ensures the production of sufficiently fluid mucus. In about 90% of cystic fibrosis patients, a mutation known as F508del is present in the CFTR channel, meaning that a single amino acid is missing at position 508 in its protein chain. This change causes CFTR to fold incorrectly and break down prematurely inside the cell, rather than functioning as a channel in the cell membrane of the airways.

As a result, patients have thick mucus in their lungs, and pathogens can no longer be effectively cleared. The consequence is chronic infection and inflammation of the airways, leading to a progressive loss of lung function—in the worst-case scenario, this necessitates a lung transplant.

People who consume ultra-processed foods have worse muscle health, study suggests

Researchers found that a diet high in ultra-processed foods is associated with higher amounts of fat stored inside thigh muscles, regardless of calorie or fat intake, physical activity or sociodemographic factors in a population at risk for knee osteoarthritis. Results of the study were published in Radiology. Higher amounts of intramuscular fat in the thigh could potentially increase the risk for knee osteoarthritis.

Ultra-processed foods usually have longer shelf lives and can be highly appealing and convenient. They contain a combination of sugar, fat, salt and carbohydrates which affect the brain’s reward system, making it hard to stop eating.

These foods include breakfast cereals, margarines/spreads, packaged snacks, hot dogs, soft drinks and energy drinks, candies and desserts, frozen pizzas, ready-to-eat meals, mass-produced packaged breads and buns, which all include synthesized ingredients.

Long-Term Cognitive Ability and Academic Achievement After Childhood Severe Malaria

Among children with a history of CerebralMalaria or severe malarial anemia, long-term follow-up demonstrated lower overall cognitive ability and lower math achievement compared with unaffected children when assessed 4 to 15 years after the index episode of Malaria.

Attention and reading scores did not differ, and outcomes among children with other forms of severe malaria were similar to unaffected children.

These findings indicate that specific severe malaria phenotypes are associated with persistent cognitive and academic effects into later childhood and adolescence, with implications for long-term follow-up and supportive services.

ESCMIDGlobal2026.


This descriptive analysis uses a subset of data from the Malarial Impact on Neurobehavioral Development (MIND) cohort study to assess whether severe malaria in Ugandan children is associated with long-term cognitive impairment or decreased academic achievement.

The longevity effects of reduced IGF-1 signaling depend on the stability of the mitochondrial genome

This insight has major implications for the development of antiaging therapies. First, they suggest that mtDNA integrity is not simply one of the many hallmarks of aging, but rather the foundation upon which others are built. And when that platform is broken, downstream hallmarks such as proteostasis or DNA repair cannot be engaged by typical means. Second, it suggests that interventions that target nutrient-sensing pathways may fail, or even backfire, when applied to organisms or tissues with high levels of mitochondrial damage. Hence, the next generation of geroprotective treatments must be tested in diverse models of aging, including those that combine multiple hallmarks, to better understand the scope and boundaries of their efficacy. Last, the efficacy of those treatments could be amplified by measures that improve the stability of the mitochondrial genome. While a reduction in IGF-1 signaling did not alter the frequency of mutations in WT or PolgD257A mice, it did slow the pace with which they reached homoplasmy. Thus, although it may not be possible today to reduce mitochondrial mutagenesis in human cells, our data show that it may already be possible to curtail the impact of mtDNA mutations on mammalian health span by slowing their clonal expansion in nondividing cells, the cells that are most sensitive to metabolic dysfunction.

While the precise mechanism by which Pappa influences clonal expansion of mtDNA mutations remains uncertain, several plausible explanations can be proposed. In the absence of cell division (the major driver for homoplasmy in dividing cells), the progression of mtDNA mutations toward homoplasmy is primarily driven by random genetic drift, the rate of mtDNA replication, and mitochondrial quality control. Thus, it is likely that loss of Pappa influences one of these three processes. Loss of Pappa may either reduce the rate of random genetic drift (potentially by changing mitochondrial fusion and fission or the spatial segregation of semi-isolated pockets of mtDNA), reduce the rate of mtDNA replication (less replication lowers the chance that a mutant mtDNA molecule expands enough to reach homoplasmy), or improve mitochondrial quality control by degrading mitochondria with mutant mtDNA molecules. It will be important to distinguish between these possibilities in future work to clear the way for novel interventions aimed at curbing the impact of mtDNA mutations on human health.

Regardless of the mechanism, these findings provide a compelling example of how the interplay between distinct hallmarks of the aging process can fundamentally alter the outcome of otherwise beneficial interventions. They reveal that the efficacy of antiaging strategies such as IGF-1 suppression is not absolute but context dependent. They are contingent on the integrity of underlying systems, including proteostasis and DNA repair. Without an intact mitochondrial genome, these pathways cannot be engaged, indicating that mtDNA integrity is required for these critical antiaging pathways. More broadly, our results underscore the need for a more integrated model of aging, one that considers not only individual pathways but also their interactions, hierarchies, and points of failure. By mapping these interactions, we can better anticipate the limitations of existing interventions and design next-generation therapies that are robust to the complex biology of aged tissues. In this light, strategies that target the expansion of mtDNA mutations, rather than their origin, may offer a powerful new axis for preserving tissue function and extending health span, even when the underlying genomic damage cannot be undone.

Epigenetic biomarkers in neurodegenerative diseases: from molecular signatures to therapeutic targets

Epigenetic molecular signatures as biomarkers in neurodegenerative diseases.

Integration of multiomic data is driving the development of cell-type-resolved reference atlases and molecular signatures of neurodegeneration.

Next-generation epigenetic editors are enabling causal interrogation of disease associated marks, revealing disease driving and potentially modifiable epigenetic mechanisms.

Altered chromatin architecture and global epigenomic dysregulation are emerging hallmarks of neurodegenerative diseases, detectable not only in the brain but also in peripheral biofluids.

Peripheral chromatin accessibility and conformation signatures are emerging as clinically actionable biomarkers for early diagnosis, prognosis, and stratification.

Circulating DNA (hydroxy-)methylation profiles offer new avenues for noninvasive biomarker discovery for neurodegenerative diseases, but low yield and sensitivity in detecting neuronal signals remain key challenges. sciencenewshighlights ScienceMission https://sciencemission.com/Epigenetic-biomarkers-in-ND


Inside a White Dwarf, Matter Stops Behaving Normally

What happens when gravity crushes a dead star so completely that atoms themselves are destroyed? Inside a white dwarf, matter enters a state so extreme that the normal rules of physics no longer apply. The familiar categories — solid, liquid, gas — all break down. What holds the star up is not heat, not fusion, not any force you encounter in everyday life. It is a quantum mechanical rule about electrons that most people have never heard of: the Pauli exclusion principle.

In this calming long-form science documentary, we explore what white dwarfs really are, why their matter is millions of times denser than anything on Earth, and how a law governing subatomic particles can hold up an object with the mass of the sun. We break down electron degeneracy pressure in physically intuitive terms, explain why these stellar remnants can cool for trillions of years without ever collapsing, and reveal the Chandrasekhar limit — the critical mass threshold beyond which even quantum mechanics loses its battle against gravity, leading to some of the most violent explosions in the universe.

From the death of sun-like stars to the far future of the cosmos, this is the story of matter pushed to its absolute limit.

Sources and Further Reading:

Chandrasekhar, S. (1931). \

LOL…not my title! Old picture! But fun interview

For this episode, I’m joined by Rick Tumlinson, co-founder of the Space Frontier Foundation and one of the most influential figures in the commercial space industry.

In this episode, we slice the conversation into four categories: the social history of the space movement and how we got here; the business of space and the astropolitics shaping who controls the final frontier; the genetics and ethics of humanity becoming a multi-planetary species; and the deeper philosophy of why leaving Earth isn’t just raw and blind ambition but something closer to destiny (for some people).

Timestamps:
0:00 Social History.
30:19 Business and Astropolitics.
45:20 Genetics and Ethics.
56:02 Philosophical.

Connect with Rick:
LinkedIn: / ricktumlinson.
Website: https://www.ricktumlinson.com.
Book: https://www.amazon.com/Why-Space-Purp?tag=lifeboatfound-20… Info: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1ILhje5… Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3qXL37W Connect: Website: https://ayushprakash.com LinkedIn: / prakash-ayush Instagram: instagram.com/ayushprakashofficial Books: AI for Gen Z: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0981182135?tag=lifeboatfound-20

Podcast Info:
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1ILhje5
Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3qXL37W

Connect:

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