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Noted
July/August 2009
A poorly understood component of the immune system
may play a major role in triggering allergies. In the May 24 online edition of Nature
Immunology, Ruslan
Medzhitov, a School of Medicine immunobiologist, and his colleagues reported
that cells called basophils, rather than dendritic cells, are the first to
react to an allergen. This discovery may help doctors develop a strategy to prevent
the overreaction that makes allergy sufferers miserable.
Astrophysicist Charles Baltay '63PhD and his
colleagues have developed the most accurate cosmological yardstick to date. The
technique involves a more precise determination of the composition and, hence,
distance from Earth, of exploding stars called supernovae. The research, important
to understanding the behavior of dark energy in the universe, will appear in
an upcoming issue of Astronomy and Astrophysics.
As debate over health care reform heats up in
Washington, emeritus public policy professor Theodore Marmor and his colleagues
offered "a cautionary tale" in the April issue of the Annals of Internal
Medicine. In their
analysis, such touted measures as health information technology, prevention,
pay for performance, and comparative effectiveness research are "ineffective as
cost-control measures." What works are "price restraint, spending targets, and
insurance regulation"—politically, note the researchers, "a tough sell.”
Biomedical engineer Kim Woodrow and her colleagues
have created a "safe and effective" way to deliver compounds called small
interfering RNA molecules to sites in the female reproductive tract where they
might be able to combat the microbes that cause sexually transmitted diseases,
including HIV. The method, tested successfully in mice, involves biodegradable
nanoparticles; the research appeared online in the May 4 issue of Nature
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