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  • Dossier - 24/05/2012 You can see a black surface perforated by colored dots in a regular arrangement.

    Biochips microsystems technology for the life sciences

    Nanoscale robots and intelligent measurement systems in arteries, fingernail-sized DNA chips that can be used to analyze thousands of genes in tiny samples, intelligent DNA microsensors – the trend in the life sciences is moving towards miniaturization.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/dossier/biochips-microsystems-technology-for-the-life-sciences
  • Press release - 24/01/2023

    Genome Editing Procedures Optimised

    Heidelberg scientists succeed in boosting the efficiency of CRISPR/Cas9 and related methods and modifying initially inaccessible DNA sequences.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/verfahren-der-genom-editierung-optimiert
  • DNA nanotechnology - 25/08/2023 Graphic representation of the transport mechanism induced by digestion with RNase H of a vesicle shown in red along gray colored filaments.

    Artificial cytoskeleton made of DNA for synthetic cells

    The physicists Prof. Dr. Kerstin Göpfrich and Prof. Dr. Laura Na Liu want to understand life from the bottom up. They intend to do this by constructing an artificial cell. However, rather than natural protein building blocks, they are using 3D-DNA structures as construction material. The first step involved creating an artificial cell skeleton that dynamically assembles and disassembles like the biological model and can transport vesicles.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/news/artificial-cytoskeleton-made-dna-synthetic-cells
  • Press release - 13/06/2024

    Which of the two DNA strands is damaged influences the cell's mutation profile

    Cancer genomes are the result of diverse mutation processes. Scientists have analyzed the molecular evolution of tumors after exposure to mutagenic chemicals. DNA lesions that persists unrepaired over several cell generations lead to sequence variations at the site of damage. This enabled the researchers to distinguish the contribution of the triggering lesion from that of the subsequent repair in shaping the mutation pattern.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/which-two-dna-strands-damaged-influences-cells-mutation-profile
  • Article - 17/03/2021 Schematische Abbildung des Tetracyclin-induzierbaren epigenetischen Gedächtnissystems in einem Escherichia coli Bakterium.

    Epigenetic switches in bacteria as biosensors

    The analysis of pathogen biomarkers and biomarkers for the diagnosis of diseases can be crucial for health. However, the detection of pathogens and diseases depends on a sensitive and reliable method that delivers rapid results. Biosensors have such properties. Researchers at the Institute of Biochemistry and Technical Biochemistry (IBTB) at Stuttgart University have constructed an epigenetic circuit composed of plasmids that might make it…

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/news/epigenetic-switches-bacteria-biosensors
  • Press release - 13/01/2025

    New tool for synthetic biology

    Scientists at the University of Stuttgart have succeeded in controlling the structure and function of biological membranes with the help of "DNA origami". The system they developed may facilitate the transportation of large therapeutic loads into cells. This opens up a new way for the targeted administration of medication and other therapeutic interventions.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/new-tool-synthetic-biology
  • Press release - 17/06/2024

    DNA as building material for tiny machines and artificial cells

    Humboldt Research Award winner Prof. Hao Yan has been conducting research at the 2nd Institute of Physics at the University of Stuttgart since May. He is regarded as one of the world's leading experts in the field of DNA nanotechnology. "My work has many points of commonality with the topics that my colleagues in Stuttgart are focusing on," says Yan. "I have therefore been cooperating with Professor Laura Na Liu's working…

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/dna-building-material-tiny-machines-and-artificial-cells
  • Press release - 17/05/2023

    Playing hide and seek in the centromere

    Centromeres, the DNA sections often found at the center of the chromosomes, display enormous interspecies diversity, despite having the same vital role during cell division across almost the entire tree of life. An international team of researchers has discovered that the variation in centromere DNA regions can be strikingly large even within a single species. The findings, now published in the journal Nature, shed light on the molecular…

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/playing-hide-and-seek-centromere
  • Dossier - 18/04/2016 An image of a nucleosome

    Epigenetics – heritable traits without changing the DNA sequence

    Epigenetics, i.e. the inheritance of traits that does not involve a change in the DNA sequence, was once a controversial subject that has since become a central focus of biological research. Epigenetic inheritance is now studied by numerous national and international research programmes. Many cellular regulatory and differentiation processes are controlled by epigenetic mechanisms that take place on different levels.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/dossier/epigenetics-heritable-traits-without-changing-the-dna-sequence
  • Press release - 21/06/2022

    Another step towards synthetic cells

    Scientists from the 2. Physics Institute at the University of Stuttgart and the Max Planck Institute for Medical Research were now able to take the next step towards synthetic cells: They introduced functional DNA-based cytoskeletons into cell-sized compartments and showed functionality. The results were recently published in Nature Chemistry.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/another-step-towards-synthetic-cells
  • Gene regulation as a starting point for cancer therapies - 02/12/2021 Schematische Darstellung der verschiedenen Stadien der Genexpression. Nukleinsäurestränge sind durch farbige Linien, Proteine durch farbige Ellipsen und die Methylierung durch kleine Kreise dargestellt.

    New investigation method for deciphering complex epigenetic networks

    The development and maintenance of uncontrolled cell division in tumours is often due to the unbalanced, complex interplay of regulatory epigenetic networks. Researchers at the Institute of Biochemistry and Technical Biochemistry in Stuttgart have developed a new screening system to identify essential components that can serve as targets for anticancer drugs.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/news/new-investigation-method-deciphering-complex-epigenetic-networks
  • Gene regulation - 20/07/2021 Vor schwarzem Hintergrund ist ein gelb leuchtendes Chromosom zwischen blau gefärbten Chromosomen sichtbar.

    The many faces of the epigenetic regulator MOF

    Epigenetic modifications play a crucial role in coordinated gene transcription, and are required for a fertilised egg cell to be able to develop into an organism with different cell types. Dr. Asifa Akhtar from the Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics in Freiburg has been studying the essential epigenetic regulator protein MOF for 20 years.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/news/die-vielen-gesichter-des-epigenetischen-regulators-mof
  • Press release - 02/11/2022

    The guardian of the (epi-)genome

    Toxicologists from the University of Konstanz have found that the protein p53 continuously protects our cells from tumorigenesis by coordinating important metabolic processes that stabilize their genomes.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/guardian-epi-genome
  • Press release - 14/04/2021

    Engineering T cells for cancer therapy efficiently and safely

    Genetically enhancing a patient's immune cells by adding therapeutic genes to them outside the body is regarded as a promising new treatment approach in oncology. However, the production of these therapeutic cells using viruses is not only expensive but time-consuming. Researchers at the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) have developed an innovative non-viral vector that can efficiently introduce therapeutic genes into immune cells.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/engineering-t-cells-cancer-therapy-efficiently-and-safely
  • Hummingbird Diagnostics GmbH - 22/09/2022 Logo-Hummingbird_Signet.jpg

    The great potential of blood-based microRNA analyses

    "The early bird catches the worm", is an apt description of what motivates Hummingbird Diagnostics GmbH from Heidelberg. The medium-sized biotechnology company analyses special biomarkers in blood, so-called microRNAs, in order to diagnose diseases at an early stage and to be able to make forecasts about the course of the disease and the success of therapy.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/news/great-potential-blood-based-microrna-analyses
  • Press release - 16/11/2021

    Cystic fibrosis & COPD: Mucus reprograms immune cells and promotes airway inflammation

    Scientists of the Translational Lung Research Center Heidelberg (TLRC) and the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) have discovered a new link between excessive airway mucus and chronic airway inflammation that is characteristic of cystic fibrosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The researchers showed that mucus in the airways reprograms certain cells of the immune system.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/cystic-fibrosis-copd-mucus-reprograms-immune-cells-and-promotes-airway-inflammation
  • Overview

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    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/diagnostics
  • Overview

    Basic research

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/research
  • Press release - 14/01/2025

    Epigenetics ensures placenta functioning

    If the development of blood vessels in the placenta is impaired, fetal growth retardation may result. Scientists from the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) and the Mannheim Medical Faculty of Heidelberg University discovered that the correct development of functioning blood vessels in the mouse placenta is controlled epigenetically: One of the enzymes that modify gene activity using methyl groups is responsible.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/epigenetics-ensures-placenta-functioning
  • Press release - 05/03/2024

    New Center for Synthetic Genomics

    Applying and developing new technologies for DNA synthesis to pave the way for producing entire artificial genomes – that is the goal of a new interdisciplinary center, 'Center for Synthetic Genomics', that is being established at Heidelberg University, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), and Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU).

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/new-center-synthetic-genomics
  • Bioinspired technologies - 03/04/2020 Foto vom Biosensor in Brauntönen; darauf eingezeichnet sind die elektrochemischen Funktionsprinzipien mit Strukturformeln.

    Diagnostics with molecular scissors – is this also possible for on-site COVID-19 tests?

    The CRISPR-Cas gene-editing technology is one of the most important developments in molecular biology in recent years. It utilises molecular scissors with which nucleic acids can be cut and edited almost arbitrarily. Researchers in Freiburg, Germany have now successfully used the technology for diagnostic purposes. They are currently working intensively on expanding the system to enable it to detect genome sequences of the novel SARS-CoV-2 virus.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/news/Diagnostics-with-molecular-scissors-is-this-also-possible-for-on-site-COVID-19-tests
  • PixelBiotech GmbH - 27/07/2021 Teaser_HuluFISH_7_color_med.jpg

    Searching for tracks with cytogenetics and AI

    The startup Pixelbiotech combines fluorescence techniques with artificial intelligence to detect DNA and RNA in medical samples. HuluFISH is the name of the method, which allows for countless applications - from detecting viral infections, such as COVID-19 or African swine fever virus, to the quality control of gene and immunotherapeutic procedures in cancer medicine.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/news/searching-tracks-cytogenetics-and-ai
  • Dossier - 14/06/2016 Schematic showing the defence chain of a prokaryote with CRISPR/Cas - integration of a phage genome into the CRISPR array and an infection of another phage whose genome is already "known" in the array. The new piece of DNA is immediately destroyed by the CRISPR/Cas complex.

    CRISPR/Cas – genome editing is becoming increasingly popular

    The number of publications and patents that involve the CRISPR/Cas system has been increasing exponentially since the technique was first described a few years ago. The increase in funding for projects involving CRISPR/Cas also demonstrates how powerful this new method is. The targeted modification of genomes (also called gene or genome editing) using CRISPR/Cas is extraordinarily accurate and also has the potential to cure hereditary diseases.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/dossier/crisprcas-genome-editing-is-becoming-increasingly-popular
  • Press release - 17/03/2025

    RNA Origami: Artificial Cytoskeletons to Build Synthetic Cells

    With the goal of creating living cells from non-living components, scientists in the field of synthetic biology work with RNA origami. This tool uses RNA biomolecule to fold new building blocks, making protein synthesis superfluous. In pursuit of the artificial cell, a research team has cleared a crucial hurdle. Using the new RNA origami technique, they succeeded in producing nanotubes that fold into cytoskeleton-like structures.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/rna-origami-artificial-cytoskeletons-build-synthetic-cells
  • Press release - 06/02/2023

    Fewer side effects thanks to personalised medicine

    Patients have 30 percent fewer serious side effects when medication doses are tailored to their genetic profile. This is what an international research consortium has found out, including the Dr. Margarete Fischer-Bosch Institute of Clinical Pharmacology at the Bosch Health Campus. With an individual DNA medication pass, as used in the study, treatments can be made more effective and safer in the future.

    https://www.gesundheitsindustrie-bw.de/en/article/press-release/weniger-nebenwirkungen-dank-personalisierter-medizin

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