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Nanotube Injector Boosts Mitochondrial Performance Through Cytoplasmic Transfer

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Extracting cytoplasmic material such as proteins, RNA, and mitochondria often relies on cell lysis using detergents or enzymes, which destroy the cells. Ultrasound and other sophisticated physical disruption methods need to be carefully tuned to avoid damaging biomolecules, potentially rendering them too time-consuming.

Delivering material into cells presents further challenges. Lipid-based carriers are limited to small molecules, viral vectors are costly, and microinjection techniques are difficult to scale. To date, no approach allows for controlled and efficient cytoplasmic transfer without compromising cell viability, according to researchers from Waseda University in Japan.

The team published a study “A Nanotube Injector for Cytoplasmic Transfer and Enhanced Mitochondrial Function” in Small Science that reports the development of a nanotube membrane-based injector—a platform that combines nanomaterials and fluid physics to directly transfer cytoplasmic contents between cell populations. The system consists of a thin gold membrane with vertically aligned nanotubes mounted on a glass tube. When this membrane is carefully pressed against cultured cells, the nanotubes penetrate the phospholipid bilayer of the living cells without causing significant damage. By adjusting the internal air pressure of the glass tube, the researchers can “suck up” cytoplasmic material from the source cells, hold it as the tube is repositioned over the target cell culture, and gently flush it into this new population using microliters of a buffer solution.

Infographic from Waseda University in Japan
Credit: Waseda University

Through several experiments using fluorescent dyes and protein assays, the researchers say they confirmed that cytoplasmic contents could be extracted in a pressure-dependent manner. They also found that careful selection of nanotube diameter, nanotube density, and applied pressure was key to minimizing cellular damage. Notably, under optimized conditions, cell viability hovered around 95%, with a cytoplasmic transfer efficiency of well over 90%, note the scientists.

To further test the capabilities of their platform, the team investigated whether it could transfer intact mitochondria. To this end, they labeled mitochondria in donor cells with a fluorescent tag and observed them in the recipient cells via confocal microscopy. They found that dozens of mitochondria could be reliably delivered per cell.

Most importantly, according to Takeo Miyake, PhD, team leader, these mitochondria remained functional, as evidenced by markedly higher levels of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) produced in recipient cells compared to controls.

“This technology establishes a new paradigm for cell manipulation—transforming cells not by genetic modification but by reconstructing intracellular composition itself,” explains Miyake, adding that such controlled cytoplasmic engineering, enabled by the proposed nanotube injector, could support the development of next-generation cell therapies, improved disease models, and more precise drug screening platforms.

“Directly transferring healthy mitochondria or cytoplasmic components into target cells is particularly relevant for regenerative medicine, where therapeutic cells often suffer from reduced metabolic activity or functional heterogeneity after isolation and expansion,” highlights Miyake, “By restoring or augmenting mitochondrial function without genetic modification, the technology offers a new strategy to improve cell quality prior to transplantation.”

Overall, this innovative system paves the way for a new level of control in cell biology research, as well as bioengineering and biomedical applications, points out the research team.

The post Nanotube Injector Boosts Mitochondrial Performance Through Cytoplasmic Transfer appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.

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Opinion: STAT+: Former Geisinger CEO: U.S. health systems must replace huge numbers of people with AI 

About 20 years ago, I stepped on stage at one of our Geisinger town halls and looked out upon a sea of people: thousands of full-time employees at an integrated health system charged with the health and well-being of millions of Pennsylvanians. 

Only a fraction of the people in that room were clinicians. 

That was the first time I fully visualized the problem: We employed more people in our revenue cycle department to process bills and reconcile data than we did doctors. And we weren’t alone. It’s the same story at every health system in America, large and small, and over the past two decades, the ratio has become dramatically more disparate. 

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

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About 20 years ago, I stepped on stage at one of our Geisinger town halls and looked out upon a sea of people: thousands of full-time employees at an integrated health system charged with the health and well-being of millions of Pennsylvanians. 

Only a fraction of the people in that room were clinicians. 

That was the first time I fully visualized the problem: We employed more people in our revenue cycle department to process bills and reconcile data than we did doctors. And we weren’t alone. It’s the same story at every health system in America, large and small, and over the past two decades, the ratio has become dramatically more disparate. 

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

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Microplastics in Human Bile Drive Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Senescence

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Microplastics have become a defining environmental signature of modern life, turning up in oceans, soil, food, drinking water, and even the air. But their biological fate inside the human body remains far less understood. A new study suggests that these particles may be doing more than simply passing through. Instead, they may be accumulating in one of the body’s most overlooked fluids—bile—and leaving behind measurable cellular damage that could shape future thinking about environmentally driven biliary injury and long‑term health effects. As the authors noted in their abstract, “the long-term accumulation patterns and chronic toxic effects of microplastics within the human biliary system are largely unknown,” underscoring the need for deeper investigation into how these particles behave in the enterohepatic circulation.

Researchers from the Tenth Affiliated Hospital of Southern Medical University (Dongguan People’s Hospital), Sun Yat-sen University, Guilin Medical University, and collaborating institutions reported the findings in Environmental Science and Ecotechnology. Their study, “Microplastics accumulate in human bile and drive cholangiocyte senescence,” provides the first direct evidence that microplastics are not only present in bile but may also contribute to mitochondrial dysfunction and premature aging in cholangiocytes, the epithelial cells that line the bile ducts.

The team collected bile from 14 surgical patients (five without gallstones and nine with gallstones) and used a multimodal analytical approach—pyrolysis–gas chromatography–mass spectrometry, laser direct infrared spectroscopy, and scanning electron microscopy—to characterize the particles. According to the paper, “we show the universal presence of microplastics in human bile,” identifying six polymer types dominated by polyethylene terephthalate and polyethylene, with most particles measuring 20–50 μm. Patients with gallstones carried substantially higher microplastic burdens, raising questions about whether biliary stasis or altered bile composition may influence microplastic retention.

bile and microplastics study
This schematic summarizes the study workflow and main findings. Human exposure to microplastics may occur through multiple routes, including industrial pollution, airborne exposure, food packaging, drinking-related plastics, and consumer products. Bile samples collected from individuals with and without gallstones were analyzed using Py-GC/MS, LDIR, and SEM, which confirmed the presence, polymer composition, particle size, and morphology of microplastics in human bile. Mechanistic experiments further showed that nanoplastic exposure induced cholangiocyte senescence by triggering mitochondrial dysfunction, including increased mitochondrial reactive oxygen species, enhanced Drp1-mediated fission, reduced mitochondrial membrane potential, and decreased ATP production, while melatonin partially alleviated these toxic effects. [Environmental Science and Ecotechnology]

To probe biological effects, the researchers exposed cultured human cholangiocytes to low-dose polystyrene nanoplastics for seven days, simulating chronic exposure. The cells exhibited mitochondrial dysfunction, elevated reactive oxygen species, reduced ATP, Drp1‑mediated mitochondrial fission, and G1 cell‑cycle arrest—hallmarks of senescence. As the authors wrote, chronic exposure “induces mitochondrial dysfunction-associated senescence in cholangiocytes,” suggesting a mechanistic link between environmental microplastics and biliary aging.

One of the most intriguing findings is that melatonin, a widely used antioxidant, partially reversed the mitochondrial and inflammatory damage. While far from a therapeutic recommendation, the result hints at a potential intervention point and gives the study translational relevance.

The work reframes the biliary system as something far more active than a simple transit channel. The data indicate that bile can serve as a reservoir for microplastics and that prolonged exposure may age cholangiocytes by driving mitochondrial dysfunction. The partial rescue with melatonin adds a mechanistic foothold for future intervention, even as the authors caution that broader human studies are essential.

For biotech, the implications are broad. The work highlights bile as a clinically accessible matrix for exposure assessment, opening the door to new diagnostics for environmental toxicology. The mitochondrial stress signature aligns with pathways already being targeted by companies developing senolytics, mitoprotective agents, and anti‑inflammatory therapeutics. The authors wrote that the research provides “a mechanistic foundation for assessing the health risks of plastic pollution and developing therapeutic interventions for environmentally driven biliary disorders.”

The post Microplastics in Human Bile Drive Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Senescence appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.

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STAT+: Health insurers score major win with higher 2027 Medicare Advantage rates

Companies that sell Medicare Advantage plans will receive a 2.5% pay bump on average in 2027, up significantly from what was proposed and a win for an industry that has experienced higher medical costs and has opposed nearly all reforms to the lucrative taxpayer-financed program.

More importantly, the Trump administration scrapped its proposal that would have used more updated data in the payment process, ensuring that Medicare Advantage insurers retain billions of dollars.

In addition to base payments, Medicare Advantage insurers get paid based on how sick their members. This process is known as risk adjustment and has been flagged by watchdogs, auditors, and federal attorneys as rife with abuse. Trump officials proposed using newer data that goes into seniors’ “risk scores,” but after intense industry pushback over the past two months, they are dropping the proposal for now. 

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

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Companies that sell Medicare Advantage plans will receive a 2.5% pay bump on average in 2027, up significantly from what was proposed and a win for an industry that has experienced higher medical costs and has opposed nearly all reforms to the lucrative taxpayer-financed program.

More importantly, the Trump administration scrapped its proposal that would have used more updated data in the payment process, ensuring that Medicare Advantage insurers retain billions of dollars.

In addition to base payments, Medicare Advantage insurers get paid based on how sick their members. This process is known as risk adjustment and has been flagged by watchdogs, auditors, and federal attorneys as rife with abuse. Trump officials proposed using newer data that goes into seniors’ “risk scores,” but after intense industry pushback over the past two months, they are dropping the proposal for now. 

Continue to STAT+ to read the full story…

Read More

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