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Showing 1–9 of 9 results
Advanced filters: Author: Christiana Ruhrberg Clear advanced filters
  • Macrophages engulf microbes and cellular debris to protect us from disease and help repair wounded tissues. In cancer, they also infiltrate the tumor, but studies in humans and mice now uncover more sinister roles for these immune cells in cancer. In 'Bedside to Bench', Christiana Ruhrberg and Michele De Palma scrutinize a clinical study where the presence of macrophages correlates with a high risk of disease progression in people with Hodgkin's lymphoma, indicating a clinical value of macrophages as biomarkers of survival. The authors also emphasize how characterizing of the mechanisms by which subpopulations of macrophages promote tumor cell motility and angiogenesis might help in the development of antiangiogenic therapies to stop tumor progression. In 'Bench to Bedside', Joseph Qualls and Peter Murray examine a study that shows how stopping migration of macrophages into the tumor can impair tumor regrowth after radiation treatment.

    • Christiana Ruhrberg
    • Michele De Palma
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 16, P: 861-862
  • Obesity leads to pathological expansion of white adipose tissue driving vascular dysfunction. Here, the authors utilize single-cell RNA sequencing to elucidate endothelial heterogeneity and demarcate key differences in obesity-associated vascular alterations in subcutaneous and visceral white adipose tissue.

    • Sana S. Hasan
    • David John
    • Andreas Fischer
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-16
  • How tissues interact to help each other grow is a major question for biologists. Here, the authors show that motor innervation controls positioning of sympathetic progenitor cells to ensure correct shaping of ganglia in the peripheral nervous system.

    • Alek G. Erickson
    • Alessia Motta
    • Igor Adameyko
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-16
  • In this Review, the authors provide an overview of the critical studies reporting Cre and CreER toxicity in the cardiovascular system, discuss the mechanisms proposed to underlie Cre toxicity and highlight the need to understand, eliminate and control for Cre/CreER toxicity in each experimental model.

    • Victoria S. Rashbrook
    • James T. Brash
    • Christiana Ruhrberg
    Reviews
    Nature Cardiovascular Research
    Volume: 1, P: 806-816
  • The p110α isoform of phosphoinositide 3-kinase has a critical role in angiogenesis. In particular, it is needed to mediate the migration of endothelial cells downstream of VEGF receptor activation, acting upstream of RhoA. The results suggest that pharmacological inhibition of the p110α isoform may be useful in anti-angiogenesis therapy of cancer.

    • Mariona Graupera
    • Julie Guillermet-Guibert
    • Bart Vanhaesebroeck
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 453, P: 662-666