Discovery of a new T cell
With all the extensive investigations scientists have conducted of the human immune system over the past century, it is astonishing that there are still new cell types to be found. Yet in May, researchers described a hybrid of B and T cells, which they named dual expresser (DE) cells, in people with type 1 diabetes. We think [the DE cell peptide may play] a very major role during the initial phase of the disease, Abdel Hamad, an immunologist at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the senior author of the study, told The Scientist at the time.
That same month, scientists also reported that humans natural killer cells, thought to form the innate immune response, can also keep memories of past encounters with offending antigens, much like the adaptive immune response does. The discovery challenges the basic dogma of how these cells functionanother reminder there is still so much unknown even in our own blood.
Measles, Ebola, and polio flared up in 2019. Cases of measles in the US were the highest since the virus was declared eradicated in America in 2000, and they have been soaring in Europe and elsewhere. Public health officials say insufficient immunization, fueled by anti-vaccine sentiment, is to blame. All the while, scientists continued to learn about the virusand just how dangerous it is. In October, researchers reported that infection with the virus that causes measles appears to leave the immune system vulnerable to infections by other pathogens.
Thousands of people died of measles this year in Democratic Republic of Congo, where an outbreak of Ebola has also been ongoing since the 2018. Violence in the region has hampered efforts to get the Ebola epidemic under control, but newly developed drugs and vaccines administered this year may help slow Ebolas spread.
Polio will soon have another vaccine to contend with as researchers have developed one to designed to counteract the failure of an older vaccine that allowed the virus to continue to circulate and eventually revert to virulence. Such vaccine-derived polio cases have now become more common than those caused by the wild virus, but the new vaccine, which is genetically engineered to avoid such reversion, is set to be deployed in 2020.
The long-term price we pay for having a chilly research environment far exceeds that of the few ideas stolen from us.
Alice Huang, CaltechFears of espionage
Federal science agencies have been cracking down on researchers who violate the rules for relationships with foreign governments, in an effort to prevent other countries from stealing US intellectual property. An eye doctor at the University of California, San Diego, cancer researchers at MD Anderson Cancer Center, geneticists at Emory University, and the leaders of Moffitt Cancer Center in Florida are among those have lost their jobs because of their ties to China.
As the US government moves to strengthen defenses against espionage, researchers have voiced concerns of racial profiling, specifically, that Chinese and Chinese-American scientists will be unfairly scrutinized. Writing to The Scientist in March, Caltech biologist Alice Huang says, The long-term price we pay for having a chilly research environment far exceeds that of the few ideas stolen from us.
To avoid legal issues, researchers from Spain and the US developed the first human-monkey chimeras in China, a Spanish newspaper reported in July. The embryos development was stalled after a few weeks, but the scientists would like to grow animals whose organs could be harvested for human transplant, a goal at least one expert finds impractical. I always made the case that it doesnt make sense to use a primate for that. Typically they are very small, and they take too long to develop, Pablo Ross, a veterinary researcher at the University of California, Davis, told MIT Technology Review.
While still illegal to pursue in the US using federal research funds, human-animal chimera projects got the regulatory green light in Japan last spring. Its good that they now allow people to do human-animal [chimera embryos] with species like pigs and sheep, Sean Wu, a developmental biologist at Stanford University, told The Scientist in April. But human-primate chimeras are a different, um, animal. Theres just too many things we dont know about when you try to chimerize two species that are so close to each other, like humans with nonhuman primates.
Teeth of the newly named hominin Homo luzonensis
CALLAO CAVE ARCHAEOLOGY PROJECT
Speaking of new humans, scientists described an entirely new species of Homo, H. luzonensis, this year. The first bone of our newly named cousin was originally dug up in Callao Cave in the Philippines in 2007, but back then it wasnt clear who exactly it belonged to. The discovery of more bones and teeth led scientists to conclude that the individuals were a distinct species. Its fantastic news. Its not every day you get to name a new species within the human family tree, Michael Petraglia, a professor of human evolution and prehistory at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History who wasnt involved in the study, told The Scientist at the time.
The friendships that convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein had forged with scientists, and the money he gave them for research, caused an uproar this year. Scholars quit their jobs at MIT in protest while some universities pledged to redirect the money to charitable causes.
At the same time, the Sackler family (of oxycontin-maker Purdue Pharma) came under heightened scrutiny for their role in the opioid epidemic. The Sacklers have been big donors to biomedical research over the years, and Tufts University recently decided to strip the Sackler name from its campus buildings.
Thanks to the work of survivors and activists, #metoos momentum carried through in 2019. Scientific conference organizers were forced to reflect on their policies for protecting attendees, especially in the archaeology field after a known harasserbanned from his own campus where he had been a professor for decadesshowed up at the Society for Archaeology meeting in Albuquerque this year. Victims of David Yesner were present at the meeting and alerted staff, but the societys response was inadequate, causing a prompt backlash on social media and a longer-term reckoning that has since resulted in a more-solidified policy. Members of the SAA voted to allow board members to ban convicted harassers from attending meetings.
The glycan (upper left) and RNA (lower right) are connected by an unknown intermediary in this possible structure of glycoRNA.
RYAN FLYNN
Although still in preprint form, results published this fall introduced a new aspect to cell biology: glycoRNAs, or noncoding RNA strung with complex sugars called glycans. Glycans are normally sequestered in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi bodies, away from RNA in the cytoplasm and nucleus. There really is no framework in biology as we know it today that would explain how RNA and glycans could ever be in the same place at the same time, much less be connected to each other, senior author Carolyn Bertozzi, a chemical biologist at Stanford University, told The Scientist in October. Whatever it is, its a completely unknown biology. Expect to see more insight into this mysterious new cellular entityits function, its structure, and its prevalence.
A wave of pulmonary illnesses and deaths related to vaping swept across the US this year. It wasnt clear to clinicians at first why these cases were appearing, but months of sleuthing led investigators to conclude that vitamin E acetate added to products, especially counterfeit liquids containing THC, was a possible culprit. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is continuing to investigate, as more ingredients may be to blame.
Researchers doubled DNAs alphabet this year with the development of two new synthetic nucleotides, adding to two created previously, leading to what they call a hachimoji DNA molecule composed of four synthetic and four natural bases. The DNA successfully transcribed hachimoji RNA using a bacteriophage RNA polymerase. This is really an exciting paper . . . a true engineering feat, Northwestern Universitys Michael Jewett, who was not involved with the research, wrote in an email to The Scientist in February.
Kerry Grens is a senior editor and the news director of The Scientist. Email her at kgrens@the-scientist.com.
Original post:
The Science News that Shaped 2019 - The Scientist
- Bristol researcher awarded Women in Cell Biology Early Career Medal 2025 - University of Bristol - December 23rd, 2024 [December 23rd, 2024]
- Simple and effective embedding model for single-cell biology built from ChatGPT - Nature.com - December 9th, 2024 [December 9th, 2024]
- Distinguished investigator brings expertise in genetics and cell biology to Texas A&M AgriLife - AgriLife Today - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology (IMCB) - Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- Joseph Gall, father of modern cell biology, dead at 96 - Carnegie Institution for Science - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- A dual role of ERGIC-localized Rabs in TMED10-mediated unconventional protein secretion - Nature.com - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Yoshihiro Yoneda Appointed President of the International Human Frontier Science Program Organization - PR Newswire - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- A new way to measure ageing and disease risk with the protein aggregation clock - EurekAlert - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- How Flow Cytometry Spurred Cell Biology - The Scientist - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- Building Cells from the Bottom Up - The Scientist - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- From Code to Creature - The Scientist - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- Adding intrinsically disordered proteins to biological ageing clocks - Nature.com - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- Advancing Cell Biology and Cancer Research via Cell Culture and Microscopy Imaging Techniques - Lab Manager Magazine - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- Study explores how different modes of cell division evolved in close relatives of fungi and animals - News-Medical.Net - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- Solving the Wnt nuclear puzzle - Nature.com - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- Prof. Jay Shendure Joins Somite Therapeutics as Scientific Co-founder - BioSpace - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- One essential step for a germ cell, one giant leap for the future of reproductive medicine - EurekAlert - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- May: academy-medical-sciences | News and features - University of Bristol - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- Universal tool for tracking cell-to-cell interactions - ASBMB Today - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- Close Encounters of Skin and Nerve Cells - The Scientist - April 15th, 2024 [April 15th, 2024]
- OrthoID: Decoding Cellular Conversations with Cutting-Edge Technology - yTech - April 15th, 2024 [April 15th, 2024]
- Impact of aldehydes on DNA damage and aging - EurekAlert - April 15th, 2024 [April 15th, 2024]
- Redefining Cell Biology: Nondestructive Genetic Insights With Raman Spectroscopy - SciTechDaily - March 29th, 2024 [March 29th, 2024]
- Scientists Unravel the Unusual Cell Biology Behind Toxic Algal Blooms - SciTechDaily - March 19th, 2024 [March 19th, 2024]
- Ancient retroviruses played a key role in the evolution of vertebrate brains - EurekAlert - February 21st, 2024 [February 21st, 2024]
- Singapore scientists uncover a crucial link between cholesterol synthesis and cancer progression - EurekAlert - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Scientists uncover a way to "hack" neurons' internal clocks to speed up brain cell development - News-Medical.Net - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- First atomic-scale 'movie' of microtubules under construction, a key process for cell division - EurekAlert - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Small RNAs take on the big task of helping skin wounds heal better and faster with minimal scarring - EurekAlert - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Shengjie Feng channels the powers of cryogenic electron microscopy - Newswise - January 19th, 2024 [January 19th, 2024]
- Study pinpoints breast cancer cells-of-origi - EurekAlert - January 19th, 2024 [January 19th, 2024]
- New analysis of cancer cells identifies 370 targets for smarter, personalized treatments - News-Medical.Net - January 19th, 2024 [January 19th, 2024]
- EU funding for pioneering research on the treatment of gliomas - EurekAlert - January 19th, 2024 [January 19th, 2024]
- The future of mRNA biology and AI convergence - Drug Target Review - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- The future of artificial breast milk, according to one lab - Quartz - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- Shedding new light on the hidden organization of the cytoplasm - News-Medical.Net - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- Bugs that help bugs: How environmental microbes boost fruit fly reproduction - EurekAlert - December 22nd, 2023 [December 22nd, 2023]
- Cells Move in Groups Differently Than They Do When Alone - NYU Langone Health - December 14th, 2023 [December 14th, 2023]
- Cells move in groups differently than they do when alone - EurekAlert - December 14th, 2023 [December 14th, 2023]
- Seattle Hub for Synthetic Biology plans to transform cells into tiny recording devices - GeekWire - December 14th, 2023 [December 14th, 2023]
- Virginia Tech and Weizmann Institute of Science tackle cell ... - Virginia Tech - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Vast diversity of human brain cell types revealed in trove of new ... - Spectrum - Autism Research News - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Singamaneni to develop advanced protein imaging method - The ... - Washington University in St. Louis - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Researchers find certain cancers can activate 'enhancer' in the ... - University of Toronto - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- 2023 Hettleman Prizes awarded to five exceptional early-career ... - UNC Research - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Faeth Therapeutics Announces National Academy of Medicine ... - BioSpace - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- From Migrant Farm Worker to Duke Scientist, Everardo Macias ... - Duke University School of Medicine - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Finding the golden ticket? Cyclin T1 is required for HIV-1 latency ... - Fred Hutch News Service - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Spermidine May Improve Egg Health and Fertility - Lifespan.io News - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Molecule discovered that grows bigger and stronger muscles - Earth.com - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- SGIOY: 3 Biotech Stocks With Potential Future Gains - StockNews.com - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Association for Molecular Pathology Publishes Best Practice ... - Technology Networks - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- A new cell type with links to gastric cancer steps up for its mugshot - Fred Hutch News Service - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Programmed cell death may be 1.8 billion year - EurekAlert - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- New study confirms presence of flesh-eating and illness-causing ... - Science Daily - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- New Institute for Immunologic Intervention (3i) at the Hackensack ... - Hackensack Meridian Health - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Post-doctoral Fellow in Cancer Biology in the Department of ... - Times Higher Education - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Scientists uncover key enzymes involved in bacterial pathogenicity - News-Medical.Net - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- B cell response after influenza vaccine in young and older adults - EurekAlert - October 16th, 2023 [October 16th, 2023]
- Post-doctoral researcher in yeast cell biology job with UNIVERSITY ... - Times Higher Education - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- expert reaction to study looking at creating embryo-like structures ... - Science Media Centre - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- UCF Bone Researcher Receives National Recognition - UCF - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- PhenomeX to Participate in American Association of Cancer ... - BioSpace - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Inland Empire stem-cell therapy gets $2.9 million booster - UC Riverside - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- New finding in roundworms upends classical thinking about animal cell differentiation - News-Medical.Net - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Biology's unsolved chicken-or-egg problem: Where did life come from? - Big Think - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Azacitidine in Combination With Trametinib May Be Effective for ... - The ASCO Post - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Researchers clear the way for well-rounded view of cellular defects - Phys.org - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- We were dancing around the lab cellular identity discovery has potential to impact cancer treatments - Newswise - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Environmental stressors' effect on gene expression explored in lecture - Environmental Factor Newsletter - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- RNA therapy restores gene function in monkeys modeling ... - Spectrum - Autism Research News - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Traumatic brain injury interferes with immune system cells' recycling ... - Science Daily - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Lab-grown fat could give cultured meat real flavor and texture - EurekAlert - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Researchers reveal mechanism of polarized cortex assembly in migrating cells - Phys.org - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Probing Selfish Centromeres Unveils an Evolutionary Arms Race - The Scientist - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Meet the 2023 Outstanding Graduating Students - UMaine News ... - University of Maine - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- The Worlds Sexiest Fragrance Unveiled, But Its Not For You - Revyuh - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- City of Hope appoints John D. Carpten, Ph.D., as director of its ... - BioSpace - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- Modernized Algorithm Predicts Drug Targets for SARS-CoV-2, Other ... - GenomeWeb - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]
- BU researcher wins $3.9 million NIH grant to develop novel therapeutic modalities for Alzheimer's - News-Medical.Net - April 8th, 2023 [April 8th, 2023]