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FIGURE 13 The Brabender Do-Corder. (Courtesy of C. W. Brabender Instruments Co., South Hackensack, NJ.) 23 shows how the extensigram changes after the addition of ascorbic acid to the dough, when it is allowed to react for different times. Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) is often added to commercial bread dough to produce a finer crumb grain and larger loaf volume. (b) Extensometer. The Halton (or Simon "Research") extensometer of the Association of British Flour Millers [14] is similar to the Brabender extensigraph. The exten-someter is part of a three-unit device that also includes a water absorption meter and a mixer-shaper unit. The ab-sorption meter determines the optimum absorption of the FIGURE 14 Two views of the developer head for the Braben-dough (generally yeasted) from the extrusion time values der Do-Corder. (Courtesy of C. W. Brabender Instruments Co., measured on several doughs prepared from the same flour South Hackensack, NJ.) sample with varying amounts of water. Optimum absorp-tion has been empirically linked to an extrusion time of 50 alveograph subjects dough to extension in two dimensions seconds. After the doughs are shaped in the mixer-shaper by blowing a molded and rested sheet into a bubble unit, they are stretched between two pegs. The force exert-[1,10,24] (AACC Method 54-30). From the physical view-ed on the stationary peg is transmitted and recorded in the point, such an extension mode is well linked with the gas form of a curve that resembles the Brabender extensigram. cell expansion in rising dough. The instrument records the (c) Alveograph. Another load-extension apparatus, un-air pressure in the bubble as a function of inflation time. A til recently more popular in several European countries typical alveograph record, an alveogram, is shown in Fig-than in North America, is the Chopin alveograph. Unlike ure 24. Its interpretation is similar to that of the extensi-the Brabender extensigraph or Halton extensometer, which gram. The maximum height of the curve is taken as a mea-both stretch the test dough piece in only one direction, the sure of resistance to extension, and its length as a measure
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75% of US scientists who answered Nature poll consider leaving

Alexandra Witze    (2025)
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Open Access

RNA neoantigen vaccines prime long-lived CD8 + T cells in pancreatic cancer

A fundamental challenge for cancer vaccines is to generate long-lived functional T cells that are specific for tumour antigens. Here we find that mRNA–lipoplex vaccines against somatic mutation-derived neoantigens may solve this challenge in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), a lethal cancer with few mutations. At an extended 3.2-year median follow-up from a phase 1 trial of surgery, atezolizumab (PD-L1 inhibitory antibody), autogene cevumeran 1 (individualized neoantigen vaccine with backbone-optimized uridine mRNA–lipoplex nanoparticles) and modified (m) FOLFIRINOX (chemotherapy) in patients with PDAC, we find that responders with vaccine-induced T cells (n = 8) have prolonged recurrence-free survival (RFS; median not reached) compared with non-responders without vaccine-induced T cells (n = 8; median RFS 13.4 months; P  =  0.007). In responders, autogene cevumeran induces CD8+ T cell clones with an average estimated lifespan of 7.7 years (range 1.5 to roughly 100 years), with approximately 20% of clones having latent multi-decade lifespans that may outlive hosts. Eighty-six percent of clones per patient persist at substantial frequencies approximately 3 years post-vaccination, including clones with high avidity to PDAC neoepitopes. Using PhenoTrack, a novel computational strategy to trace single T cell phenotypes, we uncover that vaccine-induced clones are undetectable in pre-vaccination tissues, and assume a cytotoxic, tissue-resident memory-like T cell state up to three years post-vaccination with preserved neoantigen-specific effector function. Two responders recurred and evidenced fewer vaccine-induced T cells. Furthermore, recurrent PDACs were pruned of vaccine-targeted cancer clones. Thus, in PDAC, autogene cevumeran induces de novo CD8+ T cells with multiyear longevity, substantial magnitude and durable effector functions that may delay PDAC recurrence. Adjuvant mRNA–lipoplex neoantigen vaccines may thus solve a pivotal obstacle for cancer vaccination.
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Impact of an international HIV funding crisis on HIV infections and mortality in low-income and middle-income countries: a modelling study

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Exclusive: NIH to cut grants for COVID research, documents reveal

Max Kozlov    (2025)
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Open Access

Differential protection against SARS-CoV-2 reinfection pre- and post-Omicron

The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has rapidly evolved over short timescales, leading to the emergence of more transmissible variants such as Alpha and Delta 1–3 . The arrival of the Omicron variant marked a major shift, introducing numerous extra mutations in the spike gene compared with earlier variants 1,2 . These evolutionary changes have raised concerns regarding their potential impact on immune evasion, disease severity and the effectiveness of vaccines and treatments 1,3 . In this epidemiological study, we identified two distinct patterns in the protective effect of natural infection against reinfection in the Omicron versus pre-Omicron eras. Before Omicron, natural infection provided strong and durable protection against reinfection, with minimal waning over time. However, during the Omicron era, protection was robust only for those recently infected, declining rapidly over time and diminishing within a year. These results demonstrate that SARS-CoV-2 immune protection is shaped by a dynamic interaction between host immunity and viral evolution, leading to contrasting reinfection patterns before and after Omicron’s first wave. This shift in patterns suggests a change in evolutionary pressures, with intrinsic transmissibility driving adaptation pre-Omicron and immune escape becoming dominant post-Omicron, underscoring the need for periodic vaccine updates to sustain immunity.
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Modelling Skeletal Muscle Ageing and Repair In Vitro

Healthy skeletal muscle can regenerate after ischaemic, mechanical, or toxin-induced injury, but ageing impairs that regeneration potential. This has been largely attributed to dysfunctional satellite cells and reduced myogenic capacity. Understanding which signalling pathways are associated with reduced myogenesis and impaired muscle regeneration can provide valuable information about the mechanisms driving muscle ageing and prompt the development of new therapies. To investigate this, we developed a high-throughput in vitro model to assess muscle regeneration in chemically injured C2C12 and human myotube-derived young and aged myoblast cultures. We observed a reduced regeneration capacity of aged cells, as indicated by an attenuated recovery towards preinjury myotube size and myogenic fusion index at the end of the regeneration period, in comparison with younger muscle cells that were fully recovered. RNA-sequencing data showed significant enrichment of KEGG signalling pathways, PI3K-Akt, and downregulation of GO processes associated with muscle development, differentiation, and contraction in aged but not in young muscle cells. Data presented here suggest that repair in response to in vitro injury is impaired in aged vs. young muscle cells. Our study establishes a framework that enables further understanding of the factors underlying impaired muscle regeneration in older age.
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Gene-modified pig-to-human liver xenotransplantation

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Non-caloric sweetener effects on brain appetite regulation in individuals across varying body weights

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Brain-wide silencing of prion protein by AAV-mediated delivery of an engineered compact epigenetic editor

Prion disease is caused by misfolding of the prion protein (PrP) into pathogenic self-propagating conformations, leading to rapid-onset dementia and death. However, elimination of endogenous PrP halts prion disease progression. Here, we describe Coupled Histone tail for Autoinhibition Release of Methyltransferase (CHARM), a compact, enzyme-free epigenetic editor capable of silencing transcription through programmable DNA methylation. Using a histone H3 tail-Dnmt3l fusion, CHARM recruits and activates endogenous DNA methyltransferases, thereby reducing transgene size and cytotoxicity. When delivered to the mouse brain by systemic injection of adeno-associated virus (AAV), Prnp-targeted CHARM ablates PrP expression across the brain. Furthermore, we temporally limit editor expression by implementing a kinetically-tuned self-silencing approach. CHARM potentially represents a broadly applicable strategy to suppress pathogenic proteins, including those implicated in other neurodegenerative diseases.

CHARM is an epigenetic editor that can be delivered by AAV to methylate DNA and silence prion protein throughout the brain.

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Discovery of \({{\bf{H}}}_{\mathbf{3}}^{\mathbf{+}}\) and infrared aurorae at Neptune with JWST

Emissions from the upper-atmospheric molecular ion \({{\rm{H}}}_{3}^{+}\) have been used to study the global-scale interactions of Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus with their surrounding space environments for over 30 years, revealing the processes shaping the aurorae. However, despite repeated attempts, and contrary to models that predict it should be present, this ion has proven elusive at Neptune. Here, using observations from the James Webb Space Telescope, we detect \({{\rm{H}}}_{3}^{+}\) at Neptune, as well as distinct infrared southern auroral emissions. The average upper-atmosphere temperature is a factor of two cooler than those derived 34 years ago by Voyager 2, showing that the energy balance of this region is regulated by physical processes acting on a timescale shorter than both Neptunian seasons (40 yr) and the solar cycle.
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