Thanks for the excellent tools. No complaints, just citations! Here is one more citation coming your way soon-ish:
Thanks for the excellent tools. No complaints, just citations! Here is one more citation coming your way soon-ish:
Online now: Resident tissue macrophages maintain intraocular pressure homeostasis
“Every author contributed equally to each part of the paper.” 💀
Ruslan Medzhitov lab at Yale
A big chunk of my postdoctoral work on cell-state dependent metabolism is now out at @cp-molcell.bsky.social: www.cell.com/molecular-ce... 1/
What happens when single-author science papers become rare? 🧪
An EMBO Reports Science & Society article explores whether solo publications are being edged out by collaborative #research, and what that means for #creativity in #science: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1038/s44319-025-00677-1
New paper from the lab led by @ericmulhall.bsky.social addresses how PIEZO1 and PIEZO2 are tuned to different types mechanical forces. From nanometer-scale super-resolution microscopy to in vivo experiments, links single-molecule observations to physiological function.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
This species can become multicellular using two mechanisms previously thought to be mutually exclusive
go.nature.com/4aTKdfF
The rules of immunity are different in early life! Lead author Dr. Yue Xing finds that early life DCs sense allergens and trigger inflammation directly in skin. This in-situ activation state emerges from a developing HPA and low glucocorticoids. #Naiklab @nature.com
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
New work deciphers how disruptions to #lymphatic drainage drive fibrosis in transplanted lungs and hearts through the accumulation of hyaluronan—and identifies potential therapeutic targets to prevent lung fibrosis in mice. #ScienceTranslationalMedicine https://scim.ag/3ONyh7H
We had covered the history of traction force microscopy (TFM) earlier:
bsky.app/profile/epim...
But what about applying TFM into more physiologically relevant systems, such as those in 3D?
I am @barrasa-fano.bsky.social and I'll be your guide through this thread on #3DTractionForceMicroscopy.
Older people with exceptional memory have a surprisingly high number of young neurons, a study finds
Sometimes, the only way to build back up is to let everything fall apart. This is certainly true at the cellular level. www.quantamagazine.org/break-it-to-...
📢Caroline Uhler and colleagues from Eric and Wendy Schmidt Center at @broadinstitute.org present APOLLO, a framework to integrate diverse data modalities, enabling predicting missing data modalities and identifying the influence of each modality on a phenotype. www.nature.com/articles/s43... 🖥️ 🧬
An #Artificial #Ear that feels just like the #RealThing: in laboratory experiments, researchers have produced ear cartilage that remains form-stable in animal models. Only one element is missing to make the tissue as elastic as a natural ear.
Another interesting example of how cPLA2 senses nuclear deformation and controls immune cell behaviour. Since the enzyme adsorbs to hydrophobic lipid packing defects, membrane tension and high positive curvature can have similar effects as membrane tension.
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Cages for mouse husbandry with individually ventilated caging (IVC) in a laboratory room for research animal husbandry at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf. Copyright: Christian Charisius/picture alliance/Getty Images.
Both the UK and US Governments have pledged to end research using animals, but is such a goal
realistic? And how might it change medical research?
✍️ Talha Burki reports: spkl.io/63320AQdTw
Trimodal single-cell profiling of transcriptome, epigenome and 3D genome in complex tissues with scHiCAR - @yaruidiao.bsky.social @dukehealth.bsky.social go.nature.com/4rZqimf
Recent studies in living animals reveal that the cytoplasm is a thick, jam-like fluid. And yet, miraculously, hoards of molecules find their way to each other in every crowded cell. www.quantamagazine.org/the-biophysi...
Can we accurately map cell family trees using mtDNA? Excited to share MitoDrift, a high-precision single-cell lineage inference tool, enabling reliable mapping of lineage history to cell phenotypes. doi.org/10.64898/202...
Joint with @gaoteng.bsky.social. @bloodgenes.bsky.social @jswlab.bsky.social🧵
A lymph node from a mouse with allergies. Cells (yellow) react to allergens and become antibody-producing cells (red). These antibodies, known as IgE, are the cause of most allergies in humans.
Kids who grow up in biodiverse environments tend to have fewer allergies—& now we know why. #HHMIInvestigator Ruslan Medzhitov & co have found early exposure to diverse microbes creates broad immune memory, & an antibody that helps block allergic reactions later in life: bit.ly/4rGC59h.
🚨 New Preprint from the Paluch & Chalut Labs 🚨
Ana Raffaelli et al show that the stiffness of substrate (in vitro) / basal membrane (in vivo) determine how cells interpret biochemical signals (BMP4) and which fates they acquire
#mechanobiology #hESCs #substratemechanics
doi.org/10.64898/202...
In a new Science study, researchers report that the limited number of remaining follicles of aged mice and women with premature ovarian insufficiency can be stimulated to grow and develop by modulating the stroma, the amorphous substance that surrounds them. https://scim.ag/4km7cEh
“Without the cultivated, meaning-laden, embodied intuition of the human scientist who is instinctively driven to ask questions about the nature of the world, AI systems remain rudderless when they enter the realms of uncertainty.”
— @conorfeehly.bsky.social
#ai #science #scientificdiscoveries
Multimodal analyses of early, untreated systemic sclerosis skin identify a proinflammatory vascular niche of macrophage-fibroblast signaling
Today, UCL turns 200. 🎉 For two centuries, our community has opened doors, challenged convention and pushed the boundaries of knowledge across every discipline. Thank you to everyone who’s been part of the UCL story, here’s to the next century. ✨
#UCL200 #LoveUCL
John Gurdon taught us that the beginning of life is never truly lost — only waiting to be reawakened. Long before his ideas were accepted, he showed that a cell remembers more than it appears to know: that within a differentiated nucleus lies the latent capacity to begin anew go.nature.com/3Mf8SD0
In this World View article, Ruslan Medzhitov discusses the perils of too much data and not enough theory in modern immunology
rdcu.be/e2DCZ