Feature Channels: Immunology

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15-Apr-2016 5:05 PM EDT
Engineering T Cells to Treat Pancreatic Cancer
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center

Dr. Sunil Hingorani, a member of the Clinical Research and Public Health Sciences divisions at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, will present recent groundbreaking developments in treating pancreas cancer with engineered T-cells at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2016 in New Orleans on April 16.

Released: 15-Apr-2016 3:05 PM EDT
Immune Cells Help the Brain to Self-Heal After a Stroke
Lund University

After a stroke, there is inflammation in the damaged part of the brain. Until now, the inflammation has been seen as a negative consequence that needs to be abolished as soon as possible. But, as it turns out, there are also some positive sides to the inflammation, and it can actually help the brain to self-repair.

Released: 15-Apr-2016 1:05 PM EDT
Allergen Immunotherapy Found to Pose No Risk of Infection
Massachusetts General Hospital

Mass. General study confirms the safety of allergy shots, calls into question proposed changes in preparation standards.

5-Apr-2016 4:05 PM EDT
St. Jude Researchers Reveal How Two Types of Immune Cells Can Arise From One
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Newly identified mechanism may offer ways to enhance the immune response to fight cancer or strengthen long-term protection provided by vaccines

Released: 7-Apr-2016 4:05 PM EDT
Developing Ways to Study Influenza D Virus
South Dakota State University

Researchers have found antibodies to the newly discovered influenza D virus in pigs, cattle, horses, goats and sheep, but not poultry. South Dakota State University doctoral student Chithra Sreenivasan has proven that the guinea pig can be used as an animal model and is developing a way to study the virus in living cells—trachea and lung epithelial cells from swine and cattle.

   
Released: 6-Apr-2016 8:00 AM EDT
Ludwig Cancer Research and the Cancer Research Institute Initiate Clinical Trial of a Novel Combination Immunotherapy for Ovarian Cancer
Ludwig Cancer Research

Ludwig Cancer Research and the Cancer Research Institute (CRI) have launched a Phase 1/2 clinical trial of combination immunotherapy for advanced ovarian cancer. The international, multicenter trial is led by George Coukos, director of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Lausanne and Brad Monk, director of Gynecologic Oncology at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center.

Released: 4-Apr-2016 4:05 PM EDT
NEWLY-PUBLISHED THE AUTOIMMUNE CONNECTION CALLED “THE ULTIMATE RESOURCE FOR WOMEN WITH AUTOIMMUNE DISEASES” BY AARDA
Autoimmune Association

Award-winning journalist Rita Baron-Faust and renowned lupus researcher, Dr. Jill Buyon, republishes updated "Autoimmune Connection: Essential Information for Women on Diagnosis, Treatment and Getting on with Your Life".

29-Mar-2016 2:00 PM EDT
Study Finds a New Celiac Disease Risk Factor
Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Researchers have identified a common variant in a non-coding RNA that may contribute to the intestinal inflammation that occurs in people with celiac disease. The findings point to a possible new risk factor for developing celiac disease in people with celiac disease risk genes.

Released: 30-Mar-2016 9:00 AM EDT
Physician-Scientist Dr. Leena Gandhi Named Director of Thoracic Medical Oncology at NYU Langone’s Perlmutter Cancer Center
NYU Langone Health

Renewing a commitment to advance its reputation in lung cancer and other thoracic malignancies, NYU Langone Medical Center has announced the appointment of physician-scientist Leena Gandhi, MD, PhD, as director of thoracic medical oncology at its Laura and Isaac Perlmutter Cancer.

29-Mar-2016 8:05 AM EDT
TESARO and MD Anderson Announce Immuno-Oncology Collaboration and Exclusive License
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

TESARO, Inc., an oncology focused biopharmaceutical company, and the Institute for Applied Cancer Science at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center today announced an exclusive collaboration to discover and develop small molecule product candidates against undisclosed immuno-oncology targets.

Released: 28-Mar-2016 2:05 PM EDT
High-Throughput Screen Identifies Potential Henipavirus Drug Target
PLOS

The closely related Hendra and Nipah viruses (referred to jointly as henipaviruses) are deadly cousins of the more common mumps, measles, and respiratory syncytial viruses, all members of the paramyxovirus family. Henipavirus outbreaks are on the rise, but little is known about them, partly because research has to be conducted under extreme level containment conditions.

Released: 22-Mar-2016 5:45 PM EDT
American Autoimmune Related Diseases Association Salutes Autoimmune Heroes: Kellie Martin, Haley Ramm and Barbara Ramm
Autoimmune Association

American Autoimmune Related Diseases Association Salutes Autoimmune Heroes: Kellie Martin, Haley Ramm and Barbara Ramm

11-Mar-2016 11:00 AM EST
Within Six Families, a Path to Personalized Treatment for an Immune Disorder
University of Utah Health

The most common immune disorder, common variable immunodeficiency disorder (CVID), is notoriously difficult to diagnose early, before serious complications develop. Genetic analysis of six families from across the U.S. and Europe has revealed that mutations in IKAROS, known for its central role in immune cell development, define a new class of CVID. Published in the New England Journal of Medicine, the results open the door to personalized health care tailored to patients with this disorder.

Released: 16-Mar-2016 2:35 PM EDT
Biomarkers Can Help Guide Immune-Suppressing Treatment after Organ Transplantation
Wolters Kluwer Health: Lippincott

Recently discovered biomarkers may provide valuable new approaches to monitoring immunosuppressive drug therapy in organ transplant recipients—with the potential for individualized therapy to reduce organ rejection and minimize side effects, according to a special article in the April issue of Therapeutic Drug Monitoring, official journal of the International Association of Therapeutic Drug Monitoring and Clinical Toxicology. The journal is published by Wolters Kluwer.

8-Mar-2016 10:05 AM EST
Maternal Bacterial Infections Trigger Abnormal Proliferation of Neurons in Fetal Brain
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital scientists have identified a mechanism that might explain the link between maternal infections during pregnancy and cognitive problems in children; findings may impact clinical care.

1-Mar-2016 7:05 PM EST
New TSRI Study Shows HIV Structure in Unprecedented Detail
Scripps Research Institute

A new study from scientists at The Scripps Research Institute describes the high-resolution structure of the HIV protein responsible for recognition and infection of host cells. The studyis the first to show this HIV protein, known as the envelope (Env) trimer, in its natural or “native” form.

Released: 29-Feb-2016 5:05 AM EST
New Insight Into the Possible Risk Factors Associated with Food Allergies
University of Southampton

A study by researchers at the University of Southampton and Southampton General Hospital, is the first to assess the prevalence of two different types of food hypersensitivity and the risk factors associated with them.

26-Feb-2016 5:05 PM EST
Capsule Shedding: a New Bacterial Pathway That Promotes Invasive Disease
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital scientists have discovered that an enzyme antibiotics rely on to kill bacteria also promotes survival of pneumococcus and sets the stage for serious, invasive infections

22-Feb-2016 12:05 PM EST
Molecular “Brake” Prevents Excessive Inflammation
UC San Diego Health

Inflammation is a Catch-22: the body needs it to eliminate invasive organisms and foreign irritants, but excessive inflammation can harm healthy cells, contributing to aging and sometimes leading to organ failure and death. Researchers at University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have discovered that a protein known as p62 acts as a molecular brake to keep inflammation in check and avoid collateral damage.

Released: 23-Feb-2016 5:05 AM EST
Body’s Immune System May Play Larger Role in Alzheimer’s Disease Than Thought
University of California, Irvine

Immune cells that normally help us fight off bacterial and viral infections may play a far greater role in Alzheimer’s disease than originally thought, according to University of California, Irvine neurobiologists with the Sue & Bill Gross Stem Cell Research Center and the Institute for Memory Impairments and Neurological Disorders.

Released: 22-Feb-2016 2:05 PM EST
Microbiologists Advance CRISPR Research
Montana State University

The research of two Montana State University microbiologists into how bacteria fend off attacks from viruses is included in a new paper published in the scientific journal Nature.

   
18-Feb-2016 11:05 AM EST
UEA Scientists Pave Way for New Generation of Superbug Drugs
University of East Anglia

Scientists at the University of East Anglia are getting closer to solving the problem of antibiotic resistance.

21-Feb-2016 5:00 PM EST
TSRI Researchers Uncover Potential Target for Treating Autoimmune Disease
Scripps Research Institute

Scientists from The Scripps Research Institute have identified a molecule that appears to be a cause of autoimmune diseases such as lupus. Elevated levels of the molecule allow self-reactive immune cells to escape into the blood stream and attack the body’s own tissues.

Released: 16-Feb-2016 4:05 PM EST
Cytokine Plays Dual Role in Regulating Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Study Finds
Georgia State University

Small proteins that affect communication between cells play an important role in regulating inflammation that occurs during inflammatory bowel disease, according to researchers at Georgia State University, Emory University, the University of Michigan and Amgen, a biotechnology company.

Released: 16-Feb-2016 3:05 PM EST
Optogenetic Technology Developed at UMMS Uses Light to Trigger Immunotherapy
University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester

A new optogenetic technology developed at UMass Medical School, called optogenetic immunomodulation, is capable of turning on immune cells to attack melanoma tumors in mice. Using near-infrared light, UMMS researchers have shown they can selectively activate an immune response by controlling the flow of calcium ions into the cell. This breakthrough could lead to less invasive, and more controlled and selective, immunotherapies for cancer treatment.

Released: 15-Feb-2016 11:05 AM EST
UNC School of Medicine Scientists Discover New Way Bacterial Infections Spread in the Body
University of North Carolina Health Care System

UNC School of Medicine scientists studying one of the world’s most virulent pathogens and a separate very common bacterium have discovered a new way that some bacteria can spread rapidly throughout the body – by hitchhiking on our own immune cells.

Released: 9-Feb-2016 7:00 AM EST
Clinical Trial Offers New Drug Combo to Fight Lung Cancer
University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center

The 1,000 people in New Mexico fighting lung cancer may soon be able to breathe easier. The first of more than 10 new lung cancer clinical trials has just opened under the direction of Yanis Boumber, MD. The phase 3 clinical trial, called “Neptune,” opened January 28. It compares a combination of two immune drugs with standard chemotherapy.

Released: 4-Feb-2016 12:00 AM EST
Potential New Approaches to Treating Eye Diseases
The Rockefeller University Press

Potential new approaches to treating eye diseases such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD) are described in a new study published in the February Journal of Experimental Medicine. Hongkang Xi, Menno van Lookeren Campagne, and colleagues discovered that a signaling protein, or cytokine, called IL-33, plays a key role in recruiting phagocytes to damaged retina and induces retinal degeneration. Blocking the IL-33 receptor inhibits this process and prevents injury-induced retinal degeneration.

28-Jan-2016 8:00 AM EST
Which Comes First: Self-Reported Penicillin Allergy or Chronic Hives?
American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI)

People who have self-reported penicillin allergy may have a three times greater chance of suffering from chronic hives. And people who have chronic hives tend to self-report penicillin allergy at a three times greater rate than the general population. Authors of a new study think it's not coincidence.

Released: 1-Feb-2016 7:05 PM EST
Dr. Stuart McKinnon Awarded 2016 Shaffer Prize for Research
Glaucoma Research Foundation

For his research project to determine whether therapies can be designed to modulate the immune system to prevent vision loss and blindness in glaucoma patients, Stuart J. McKinnon, MD, PhD was awarded the 2016 Shaffer Prize for Innovative Glaucoma Research.

29-Jan-2016 3:05 PM EST
Vaginal Microbes Can Be Partially Restored to C-Section Babies
UC San Diego Health

In a small pilot study, researchers at University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai determined that a simple swab to transfer vaginal microbes from a mother to her C-section-delivered newborn can alter the baby's microbial makeup (microbiome) in a way that more closely resembles the microbiome of a vaginally delivered baby.

Released: 27-Jan-2016 12:05 PM EST
Study Shows Zinc Supplement Boosted Serum Zinc Levels and Immunity in Older Adults
Tufts University

A new study finds that providing zinc supplements to older adults in nursing homes increased their serum zinc levels and improved their immune response, providing potential protection against infection. The research group’s previous work found that nursing home residents had low zinc levels.

20-Jan-2016 12:05 PM EST
New Model: How Asthma Develops From Exposure to House Dust Mites
University of Alabama at Birmingham

University of Alabama at Birmingham researchers have found a previously unknown step in the pathway that leads to asthma, a discovery that may offer new therapeutic approaches to this incurable disease. Asthma affects more than 25 million people in the United States, including about 7 million children.

Released: 25-Jan-2016 1:05 PM EST
Immunotherapy Research Leads To "Triple Play" for One Scientist
University of Kentucky

Researchers have begun to explore in earnest the concept of "mixed vascular dementia," but until recently there was no reliable animal model. When Donna Wilcock of the UK Sanders-Brown Center on Aging discovered that a special diet deficient in B vitamins induced cognitive impairment in mice, she gave science the animal model it needed, plus the potential for a modifiable biomarker for vascular cognitive impairment.

Released: 25-Jan-2016 11:00 AM EST
Potential Therapeutic Targets Identified for Multiple Sclerosis
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

Treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS) and other inflammatory diseases may benefit by new findings from a study that identified potential therapeutic targets for a devastating disease striking some 2.3 million people worldwide.

Released: 21-Jan-2016 4:05 PM EST
Antibodies May Provide ‘Silver Bullet’ for Ebola Viruses
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston (UTMB) reported today in the journal Cell that they have isolated human monoclonal antibodies from Ebola survivors which can neutralize multiple species of the virus.

   
Released: 21-Jan-2016 8:05 AM EST
The Immune System Maintains a Memory of Past Infections by Priming Genes for Future Encounters
University of Birmingham

Our ability to fight off recurrent infections, such as a colds or flu, may lie in the ‘immunological memory’ found in a newly discovered class of gene regulatory elements, according to research from the University of Birmingham, supported by the BBSRC and Bloodwise.

19-Jan-2016 1:05 PM EST
Researchers Reveal Structure of Protein Complex That Plays Key Role in Modulating Immune System
Sanford Burnham Prebys

Search for new inflammatory disease drugs may be aided by detailed structure of distinct ubiquitin ligase complex

Released: 19-Jan-2016 12:05 PM EST
New TSRI Study Shows Path to ‘Dial Down’ Autoimmunity Without Compromising Immune Response
Scripps Research Institute

A new study led by scientists at The Scripps Research Institute shows how dangerous autoimmune responses, seen in diseases such as lupus and multiple sclerosis, might be “dialed down” without compromising the immune system’s ability to fight viruses and bacteria.

Released: 19-Jan-2016 7:05 AM EST
Important Regulator of Immune System Decoded
IMP - Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

Plasma cells play a key role in our immune system. Now scientists at the Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP) in Vienna, Austria, and at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute (WEHI) in Melbourne, Australia, succeeded in characterizing a central regulator of plasma cell function. The results of both teams are published in two back-to-back papers in “Nature Immunology” today.

Released: 14-Jan-2016 3:05 PM EST
How Bacterial Communication 'Goes with the Flow' in Causing Infection, Blockage
Princeton University

The destructive ability of bacteria to organize an infection or block pathways such as intestines, medical stents and wastewater pipes relies on communication with one another.

Released: 11-Jan-2016 4:05 PM EST
Life-Extending Hormone Bolsters the Body's Immune Function
Yale University

A hormone that extends lifespan in mice by 40% is produced by specialized cells in the thymus gland, according to a new study by Yale School of Medicine researchers. The team also found that increasing the levels of this hormone, called FGF21, protects against the loss of immune function that comes with age.

Released: 7-Jan-2016 1:05 PM EST
Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute Scientists Find New Evidence of Immune System Plasticity
Virginia Tech

Researchers found that the inherent flexibility of the immune system is even more complex than previously understood. Study reveals more about how memory cells arise after infections.

Released: 7-Jan-2016 12:05 PM EST
Genetic Variation Linked to Respiratory Disease
University of Arizona

A UA researcher and clinician team has discovered that genetic mutations in a protein associated with asthma can affect a person’s susceptibility to a variety of lung diseases — and could lead to new treatments.

6-Jan-2016 11:30 PM EST
Tom and Holly Gores Partner with Children’s Hospital Los Angeles to Create New State-of-the-Art Allergy Center
Children's Hospital Los Angeles

Financier and philanthropist Tom Gores and his wife Holly have made a $5 million commitment to establish a new pediatric allergy treatment center at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

Released: 29-Dec-2015 2:05 PM EST
Early-Life Exercise Alters Gut Microbes, Promotes Healthy Brain and Metabolism
University of Colorado Boulder

The human gut harbors a teeming menagerie of over 100 trillion microorganisms, and researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder have discovered that exercising early in life can alter that microbial community for the better, promoting healthier brain and metabolic activity over the course of a lifetime.

Released: 18-Dec-2015 3:05 PM EST
Immunotherapy Breakthrough Led by UCLA Researcher Now Approved as Standard of Care for Advanced Melanoma
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A first-of-its-kind (anti-PD-1) immunotherapy was approved today by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration as first-line treatment for metastatic melanoma—allowing greater access to this therapy for patients without having to previously receive other prior treatments.

16-Dec-2015 5:00 AM EST
Surfing DNA: Enzyme Catches a Ride to Fight Infection
MRC Clinical Sciences Centre/Institute of Clinical Sciences (ICS) Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London

Scientists have shown for the first time that an enzyme crucial to keeping our immune system healthy “surfs” along the strands of DNA inside our cells.



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