All Sequencing articles
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ArticleDesigning targeted assays for clinical success from the start
Why do some targeted assays move smoothly from discovery to clinical practice while others stall? The answer often lies in the earliest design decisions, where choices about samples, platforms and data determine what is possible later.
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ArticleHow brain donation is driving autism research
To study the biological underpinnings of autism, researchers must examine the human brain itself. This article explores how Autism BrainNet supports this work through coordinated tissue donation and preservation.
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ArticleDrug discovery integration takes centre stage at SLAS Boston 2026
Drug discovery has no shortage of powerful technologies, but the challenge now is making them work together. At SLAS Boston 2026, researchers and technology developers revealed how laboratories are connecting the entire experimental pipeline.
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NewsCat cancer study reveals targets for human drugs
A major international study has discovered genetic similarities between cancers in cats and humans, potentially helping to inform future drugs that could benefit both species.
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ArticleRethinking drug discovery through transcription factor biology
Complex diseases rarely have single targets. By focusing on transcription factor activity and disease signatures, Scripta Therapeutics is taking a different approach to identifying the drivers of pathology.
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Article2026: the year AI stops being optional in drug discovery
AI is moving from a supporting role into the core of drug discovery. By 2026, it is expected to shape how targets are chosen, how biology is analysed and how development decisions are made.
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ArticleAI steps into drug safety: predicting liver injury earlier than ever before
Drug-induced liver injury remains one of drug development’s most costly pitfalls. Now, AI and transcriptomics may offer a way to spot risks long before they reach patients.
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NewsMaternal stress may alter foetal brain development via immune pathways
Stress during pregnancy may disrupt the maternal gut-immune system, altering foetal brain development and revealing sex-specific vulnerabilities linked to neurodevelopmental risk
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NewsNew study links prenatal DNA screening to better CMV treatment decisions
A new study suggests that a low-cost form of non-invasive prenatal screening could help clinicians identify pregnant women at highest risk of transmitting cytomegalovirus to their babies.
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NewsNew AI genomics platform targets kidney and cardiorenal disease
Seattle-based biotech company, Variant Bio, have launched Inference, an AI-powered genomics platform designed to accelerate drug discovery and identify genetically supported targets.
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ArticleFertility beyond IVF: therapeutic advances in reproductive biotech
Procedural advances in IVF are reaching their biological limits. Reproductive biotech is now moving upstream, developing first in class therapeutics that target meiosis, gamete quality and implantation biology as druggable mechanisms in early discovery.
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ArticleThe data fragmentation problem holding drug discovery back
The DMTA cycle depends on clear data flow, yet most labs still work across disconnected systems. Sean McGee, Director of Product at Certara, explains how better infrastructure and AI can help teams work faster and make decisions with more confidence.
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NewsTY1: new experimental drug restores tissue after heart attack
Scientists have developed an experimental RNA-based drug, TY1, that repairs DNA, reduces scar tissue and could lead to new treatments for heart attacks and autoimmune diseases.
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ArticleThe mother of invention: from steam engines to AI-designed drugs
Every great leap in history started with a single, urgent need. Now AI is emerging as the next great engine of invention, transforming the future of medicine faster than ever imagined.
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NewsTargeting p300 may boost immunotherapy in kidney cancer
Researchers have discovered how renal medullary carcinoma cells evade immunotherapy by mimicking immune cells, driving rapid tumour progression.
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ArticleMapping the genome in 3D to reveal new drug targets
Find out how a three-dimensional view of the genome is giving scientists a clearer picture of disease biology and revealing new opportunities for targeted therapies.
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NewsOTULIN enzyme found to control tau production in Alzheimer’s
New research has shown that the enzyme OTULIN regulates tau at the gene-expression level rather than through protein degradation.
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ArticleDeep data not big data
Bigger isn’t always better. In drug discovery, Dr Michael Ritchie argues that the future belongs not to those with the most data, but to those who understand its biological depth.
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ArticleInside ELRIG Drug Discovery 2025: automation, AI and human-relevant models
At ELRIG’s Drug Discovery 2025, Drug Target Review spoke with the teams turning big ideas into usable tools – automation, AI and biology – that help scientists work smarter.
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ArticleSPNS1 mutations reveal new lysosomal lipid recycling pathway
Scientists have linked rare mutations in SPNS1 to a previously unknown lipid recycling pathway in lysosomes, revealing how faulty fat processing can trigger muscle and liver disease.


