All Editorial articles – Page 59
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         News NewsCold sore viral infection implicated in development of Alzheimer’s diseaseSymptomatic infection with the virus responsible for cold sores around the mouth–herpes simplex 1, or HSV-1 for short—may have a key role in the development of Alzheimer’s disease, suggests a large pharma industry-funded US study. 
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         News NewsScientists uncover key clues to how a viral infection can lead to arthritis-like diseaseBy studying Chikungunya virus, scientists have shed light on how immune responses to viral infections may lead to persistent symptoms of autoimmune disease. 
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         News NewsNew blood test shows superior sensitivity in detecting HPV-associated head and neck cancersA new liquid biopsy blood test could help detect cases of human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated head and neck cancers with significantly higher accuracy than currently used methods, including before patients develop symptoms. 
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         News NewsWorld Health Assembly adopts historic Pandemic Agreement to make the world more equitable and safer from future pandemicsMember States of the World Health Organization (WHO) today formally adopted by consensus the world’s first Pandemic Agreement, following more than three years of intensive negotiations launched by governments in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. 
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         News NewsSurvival trick: Pathogen taps iron source in immune cellsThe body defends itself against pathogens by depriving them of vital iron. However, researchers have discovered that Salmonella bacteria specifically target iron-rich regions within immune cells to replicate, evading the immune defense. 
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         News NewsBiosynthetic pathway discoveries mean we can halve the price of costly cancer drugResearchers have identified the enzymes responsible for the two critical final steps in the biosynthetic pathway that makes the chemotherapy drug Taxol active as a drug, potentially opening it up to biotech based production. 
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         News NewsGut bacteria and acetate offer a great combination for weight lossResearchers have discovered a new way to reduce obesity - supplying the gut with extra acetate reduces fat and liver mass in both normal and obese mice, as long as bacteria of the Bacteroides species is also present in the gut. 
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         News NewsResearchers reveal how microbes can swim without a brainMany microorganisms can move in a goal oriented way in liquids, despite the lack of a complex nervous system. New research explains the behaviour of microorganisms, and could also enable nanobots to move in a targeted manner. 
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         News NewsCommon drugs can help viruses spreadJAK inhibitors are often prescribed for autoimmune diseases and inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, but scientists have found they also weaken the body’s natural defences against viruses. 
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         News NewsResearch team traces evolutionary history of bacterial circadian clock on ancient EarthTo better understand the circadian clock in modern-day cyanobacteria, researchers studied ancient timekeeping systems. They examined the oscillation of the clock proteins in modern cyanobacteria, comparing it to the function of ancestral Kai proteins. 
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         News NewsCould nanoplastics in the environment turn E. coli into a bigger villain?New research suggests certain nanoplastics may make foodborne pathogens more virulent. Nanoplastics with positively charged surfaces were more likely to cause physiological stress in E. coli O157:H7, making them pump out more Shiga-like toxin. 
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         News NewsWHO validates Mauritania for eliminating trachoma as a public health problemThe World Health Organization (WHO) has validated Mauritania as having eliminated trachoma as a public health problem, making it the seventh country in WHO’s African Region to achieve this significant milestone. 
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         News NewsHow the Epstein-Barr virus promotes its spread within the bodyResearchers have discovered that the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) increases the ability of infected immune cells to migrate. In this way, the pathogen promotes its spread in the body – a discovery that may have therapeutic implications. 
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         News NewsGenomic data shows widespread mpox transmission in West Africa prior to 2022 global outbreakMpox was transmitted among humans in Nigeria for eight years before sparking the international outbreak in 2022. Using genomic tracing, the researchers estimate that the virus’s ancestor first emerged in southern Nigeria in August 2014. 
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         News NewsStudy probes why patients with mitochondrial disease are more susceptible to infectionsA new study shows that damaged mitochondria put the immune system in a constant state of alert, leading to dangerous overreactions when patients with rare mitochondrial diseases encounter bacteria. 
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         News NewsA turning point in medicine: phage therapy moves from promise to practiceFrom June 10–11, 2025, the international scientific and medical community will gather in Berlin for Targeting Phage Therapy 2025, the leading global event focused on translating phage research into clinical reality. 
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         News NewsPapua New Guinea eliminates trachoma as a public health problemPapua New Guinea (PNG) has been validated by the World Health Organization (WHO) for eliminating trachoma as a public health problem. Trachoma, the world’s leading infectious cause of blindness, no longer poses a public health threat in the country. 
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         News NewsOcean microbes offer clues to environmental resilienceResearchers have developed a new way to identify genetic changes that help tiny oxygen-producing microbes survive in extreme environments. 
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         News NewsRising temperatures lead to unexpectedly rapid carbon release from soilsScientists investigate the sensitivity of soil carbon, which is directly related to the release of CO2 from soils, under a changing climate, such as rising temperatures and/or variations in the hydrological cycle. 
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         News NewsHeat-tolerant symbionts a critical key to protecting elkhorn coral from bleaching during marine heatwavesHeat-tolerant symbiotic algae may be essential to saving elkhorn coral (Acropora palmata)—a foundational species in Caribbean reef ecosystems—from the devastating impacts of marine heatwaves and coral bleaching. 
