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Heterogeneity in immune cell abnormalities in patients with systemic sclerosis

“We know that immune dysregulation causes vascular damage and tissue fibrosis in systemic sclerosis,” says the lead author. “However, it remains unclear why skin symptoms and the level of organ involvement differ from patient to patient.”

To explore this, the researchers took blood and tissue samples from patients with systemic sclerosis and analyzed them cell by cell, looking for differences in gene expression. Additionally, proteins on the cell surface were examined to identify biomarkers of disease, which are useful for identifying and treating diseases in earlier stages.

“The results were intriguing,” explains the senior author. “We identified a specific subset of immune cells, the EGR1-expressing subpopulation of CD14+ monocytes, that were clearly associated with scleroderma renal crisis, a serious kidney complication in patients with systemic sclerosis.”

While immune cells usually help the body fight infection and disease, in certain cases they can be inappropriately activated through gene expression. In this instance, CD14+ monocytes differentiated – or transformed – into destructive macrophages, which can further promote inflammation near the kidneys and contribute to the thickening and scarring of internal organs.

In addition, the researchers found that CD8+ T cells with a type II interferon signature, which makes the immune cells particularly aggressive and inflammatory, were linked to progressive interstitial lung disease. EGR1-expressing CD14+ monocytes and these peculiar CD8+ T cells are likely to accumulate in the kidney or the lung, respectively, and produce or recruit other factors that contribute to disease progression.


Treating rare diseases can be complicated at the best of times, and it gets even more complicated when different patients with the same disease exhibit different symptoms. Now, researchers have reported a cellular signature that might explain why some patients with autoimmune disease are stable while others face life-threatening complications.

Exercise-induced CLCF1 attenuates age-related muscle and bone decline in mice

Aging impairs muscle and bone health, and exercise is known to mitigate this decline, partly through secreted factors. Here, the authors show that the muscle-derived factor CLCF1, which declines with age but is restored by exercise, mediates musculoskeletal benefits in aged mice.

Teleportation Becomes a Scientific Reality

When we think about the future of our communications, we rarely imagine that it could be hidden in the intricacies of the infinitely small. Yet, it is there, among frisky photons, that the next digital revolution could take shape. A simple photon, teleported from one point to another across the globe via the Internet, opens up dizzying horizons. Who would have thought that the key to our future exchanges would lie in an elementary particle, capable of challenging everything we thought we knew about information transmission?

Researchers at Northwestern University have recently achieved a major milestone in the field of quantum physics. They have succeeded in teleporting a photon over a distance of 30.2 km through an Internet network. This feat, once confined to the realm of science fiction novels, represents a significant advance in exploring the possibilities offered by quantum entanglement. With this accomplishment, the foundations of a future global quantum network seem to be rapidly approaching.

Team discovers how tiny parts of cells stay organized, adding new insights for blocking cancer growth

A team of international researchers led by scientists at City of Hope provides the most thorough account yet of an elusive target for cancer treatment. Published in Science Advances, the study suggests a complex signaling process involving paxillin, a focal adhesion protein that acts as a hub to connect with other proteins, may be vulnerable to therapy despite its fluid state.

“Disrupting the interaction of paxillin with bears direct relevance in ,” said Ravi Salgia, M.D., Ph.D., the Arthur & Rosalie Kaplan Chair in Medical Oncology at City of Hope’s comprehensive cancer center. “This can lead to precision therapeutics targeting a specific paxillin function that is dominant in cancer cells, but less prevalent in healthy cells.”

The research adds important new details on a hard-to-characterize network of cellular proteins. Dr. Salgia and his team looked closely at paxillin, which prompts cells to change in response to the environment. This helps to evolve and evade detection, while also causing resistance to treatment. Dr. Salgia and his team have been working on elucidating the function of paxillin for over three decades. He and his colleagues were the first to clone the full-length human gene in 1995 at Harvard.