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Spatial Single‑Cell Platform Reveals Barriers to Antibody Delivery in Solid Tumors
Targeting solid tumors remains one of oncology’s most persistent challenges. Even when a therapeutic antibody is well‑designed, and its molecular target is clear, the drug often struggles to reach its destination inside the dense, heterogeneous architecture of human tumors. Understanding why these agents fail in patients has been a longstanding blind spot in cancer pharmacology.
A new study from Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Stanford University begins to close that gap. In work published in Nature Biotechnology, researchers developed a single-cell spatial pharmacology (SSP) platform, an experimental and analytical system that visualizes drug–tumor interactions directly in human solid tumors. The approach provides a high‑resolution view of drug delivery, target engagement, and the physical barriers that shape therapeutic response.
Eben Rosenthal, MD, the Barry and Amy Baker professor and chair of otolaryngology–head and neck surgery at Vanderbilt Health, is senior author of the paper, titled “Single‑cell spatial pharmacobiology identifies conserved stromal barriers to therapeutic antibody delivery in human solid tumors.” Rosenthal and co‑author Guolan Lu, PhD, of Stanford University School of Medicine, developed SSP to quantify how antibody‑based therapies behave once they enter the tumor microenvironment.
“Identifying the reason drugs fail in so many cancer patients is a high priority, and SSP can help,” Rosenthal said. “Current pharmacology tools and imaging methodologies do not provide the answers we need to understand which drugs fail due to poor delivery and which ones fail due to insufficient activity upon entering the tumor.”
Using SSP, the team found pronounced spatial heterogeneity in both drug delivery and target engagement across head and neck, pancreatic, and other solid tumor types. The data point to a consistent culprit: the stromal architecture, known as the dense, noncancerous tissue surrounding tumors, which acts as a physical barrier that limits antibody penetration.
“This approach allows us to examine how the drug distributes within the tumor, the cell types with which it interacts, how strongly it engages its molecular target, and how the architecture of the tumor microenvironment shapes its delivery and activity,” Rosenthal said.
The study included analysis of panitumumab‑IRDye800CW, an antibody used in Phase I trials and which is under investigation for fluorescence‑guided surgery. Rosenthal’s group has long been at the forefront of integrating fluorescence imaging into cancer research and surgical oncology.
“By directly measuring drug delivery at the site of targeted antibody therapy, SSP can distinguish tumor regions that are biologically unresponsive from those that are simply underexposed to the agent. We hope additional study in larger sample sizes of patients can help further validate the application of SSP to identify barriers to drug efficacy,” Rosenthal added.
By exposing the physical and biological barriers that shape drug performance in human tissue, the platform offers a path toward designing tools that account for the true complexity of the tumor microenvironment.
The post Spatial Single‑Cell Platform Reveals Barriers to Antibody Delivery in Solid Tumors appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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Laser‑Driven Phase Contrast Enhances Cryo‑EM Resolution of Small Proteins
You know when you are at the eye doctor getting an updated prescription, and suddenly the world snaps into sharper focus? Physicists at the University of California (UC), Berkeley, have now done something similar for electron microscopy. By introducing phase contrast into a cryo‑electron microscope, they have delivered dramatically sharper images of some of biology’s smallest and most elusive proteins.
The advance comes from a new laser phase plate (LPP), described in the paper “Laser phase plate improves structure determination of small proteins by cryo‑EM,” which was published recently in Science. Led by physicist Holger Mueller, PhD, of UC Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the team demonstrated that a laser‑driven phase plate can overcome one of cryo‑EM’s most persistent limitations: poor contrast for small proteins.

Cryo‑EM has transformed structural biology over the past decade, earning a Nobel Prize in 2017 for enabling high‑resolution structures without crystallization. But despite its impact, the technique still struggles with proteins below ~70 kilodaltons—a size range that includes about 90% of the human proteome. “Because of signal-to-noise limitations, the majority of human and animal proteins are too small to be analyzed by these methods [cryo-EM and cryoelectron tomography]. The increase in signal-to-noise ratio provided by this laser phase plate is expected to overcome these important limitations.”
The new LPP begins to address that problem. The LPP uses an intense, continuous‑wave laser to shift the phase of the electron beam itself. This produces true phase contrast without dimming or destabilizing the beam. Mueller described the laser focus as “75 kilowatts focused to a few microns… That’s more powerful than what you use for welding. It has more power than a military laser. It builds up the brightest continuous laser focus ever.”
Installed in a custom Thermo Fisher Titan Krios, the LPP immediately improved the clarity and resolvability of small proteins, including hemoglobin, which sits at the lower limit of what today’s cryo‑EM instruments can handle. As the authors wrote in the abstract: “Here, we show that the laser phase plate (LPP)… enhances the resolution in single-particle reconstruction of small proteins by improving specimen-motion correction, recovery of information from the early frames, as well as particle visualization, 3D classification, and alignment.”

These improvements were achieved using standard defocus ranges and reconstruction workflows. “For the most challenging cases—small particles, bad specimens—the laser produces a very considerable advantage,” Mueller said.
The impact extends beyond single‑particle analysis. Cryo‑electron tomography (cryo‑ET), which assembles multiple angular views of a molecule or protein into a three-dimensional image, stands to benefit even more. “With cryo-ET, we’re looking at small, very complicated cellular material that’s incredibly crowded inside the cell,” said Bridget Carragher, PhD, founding technical director of imaging at Biohub. “It’s like a forest of trees, and you’re trying to find one leaf on one tree in there. Cryo-ET needs a dramatic step forward in contrast, so we can start to see what’s going on inside the cell. That’s what the laser phase plate promises to give us.”
Biohub is developing a dual‑laser version of the system, designed to reduce component wear and minimize aberrations. Meanwhile, Mueller’s team is pushing toward imaging proteins as small as 17 kilodaltons, a threshold that would open access to vast regions of the human proteome previously invisible to cryo‑EM.
“This technology is a step function change for biology,” said Stephani Otte, PhD, Biohub’s vice president of imaging science. “What was once invisible will become visible—and that changes everything about how we understand disease.”
“The bottom line is, if you have a large protein and a really good sample—a fresh one or one frozen without bubbles, for example—you may not need the phase plate to get a single, high-quality image. But for a small protein and a bad sample, laser-on is best,” Mueller said. “This could fill an enormous gap in our knowledge of protein structures that can’t be crystallized or are too small for today’s cryo-EM. And it will be revolutionary for cryo-ET.”
The post Laser‑Driven Phase Contrast Enhances Cryo‑EM Resolution of Small Proteins appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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STAT+: Updated: Tracking RFK Jr.’s promises to remake health in America
Updated June 11, 2026
WASHINGTON — A pledge to “Make America Healthy Again” earned Robert F. Kennedy Jr. his job atop U.S. health agencies a year and some change ago. He’s now had the opportunity to turn his words into action, with mixed results.
“All one needs” to prove the health secretary’s attentiveness is to “review my unprecedented list of accomplishments on a wide range of issues, all of which I drove,” Kennedy posted on X on Wednesday in response to a journalist.
Updated June 11, 2026
WASHINGTON — A pledge to “Make America Healthy Again” earned Robert F. Kennedy Jr. his job atop U.S. health agencies a year and some change ago. He’s now had the opportunity to turn his words into action, with mixed results.
“All one needs” to prove the health secretary’s attentiveness is to “review my unprecedented list of accomplishments on a wide range of issues, all of which I drove,” Kennedy posted on X on Wednesday in response to a journalist.
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An obesity drug deep-dive, and peptides move mainstream
Can any of the new obesity medications in development stand out from the pack? Which company just broke records with its IPO? And will the Food and Drug Administration allow greater access to experimental peptides?
We discuss all that and more on this week’s episode of “The Readout LOUD,” STAT’s biotech podcast.
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