Bacteria-killing viruses redirect vaccine immunity to destroy cancer
newscientist - Phages, viruses that infect bacteria, could be genetically manipulated to destroy cancerous cells using the immunity we have acquired from vaccines
AI Summary: Researchers show bacteriophages can redirect existing vaccine‑induced immunity to attack cancer cells, effectively hijacking antiviral immune memory to target tumours. This clever preclinical strategy repurposes phages as delivery vehicles and immunomodulators, opening a potential new class of off‑the‑shelf immunotherapies that could complement or bypass current T‑cell approaches — if it survives the usual valley of translation.
First use of precision editing to study human embryo development reveals role of master gene
medicalxpress - Research led by the University of Cambridge Loke Center for Trophoblast Research has shown that a genome-editing technique can be used to alter a single gene in human embryonic cells, enabling the study of very early human development in unparalleled deta…
AI Summary: Scientists used precision genome editing in human embryos to identify a 'master' developmental gene that triggers early human development stages. The finding clarifies key molecular steps, offering insights into congenital disorders and embryology, but also reignites ethical debate over experimental editing — cue the lab‑coat philosophers.
Updated Long-Term Follow-Up From the Phase 1b BOT+BAL Study at ESMO GI 2026 – Agenus
oncodaily - Agenus shared a post on LinkedIn: “At ESMOGI26, Agenus will share updated long-term follow-up from the Phase 1b study evaluating botensilimab plus balstilimab (BOT+BAL) in patients with MSS metastatic colorectal […]
AI Summary: Updated follow‑up data presented for botensilimab plus balstilimab reveal meaningful and durable activity in microsatellite‑stable metastatic colorectal cancer, with especially encouraging outcomes in patients lacking active liver metastases. The Agenus combination, showcased at a major gastrointestinal oncology meeting, renews interest in immune strategies for historically refractory MSS disease.
- Agenus releases Phase 1b three-year BOT+BAL survival data (2)
- Clinical and community reaction: experts weigh in on BOT+BAL (3)
- ESMO GI: BOT+BAL benefits in patients without active liver metastases (3)
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