PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers identify key biomarkers for chronic fatigue syndrome

2025-08-11
(Press-News.org) ITHACA, N.Y. – When cells expire, they leave behind an activity log of sorts: RNA expelled into blood plasma that reveal changes in gene expression, cellular signaling, tissue injury and other biological processes.

Cornell University researchers developed machine-learning models that can sift through this cell-free RNA and identify key biomarkers for myalgic encephalomyelitis, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). The approach could lead to the development of diagnostic testing for a debilitating disease that has proved challenging to confirm in patients because its symptoms can be easily confused with those of other illnesses.

The findings were published Aug. 11 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The lead author is Anne Gardella, a doctoral student in biochemistry, molecular and cell biology in the De Vlaminck lab.

The project was a collaboration between the labs of co-senior authors Iwijn De Vlaminck, associate professor of biomedical engineering in Cornell Engineering, and Maureen Hanson, Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

“By reading the molecular fingerprints that cells leave behind in blood, we’ve taken a concrete step toward a test for ME/CFS,” De Vlaminck said. “This study shows that a tube of blood can provide clues about the disease’s biology.”

De Vlaminck’s lab previously used the cell-free RNA technique to identify the presence of Kawasaki disease and multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) – puzzling inflammatory conditions that have also proved difficult to diagnose. After hearing De Vlaminck deliver a presentation about a project involving cell-free DNA, Hanson, who studies the pathophysiology of ME/CFS, reached out about a potential collaboration.

Using cell-free RNA to measure system-wide cellular turnover in patients is a relatively new concept, and it seemed particularly well-suited for unraveling the mystery of ME/CFS.

“ME/CFS affects a lot of different parts of the body,” said Hanson, who directs the Cornell Center for Enervating NeuroImmune Disease (ENID). “The nervous system, immune system, cardiovascular system. Analyzing plasma gives you access to what’s going on in those different parts.”

There are no laboratory diagnostic tests for ME/CFS, so doctors must rely on a range of symptoms, such as exhaustion, dizziness, disturbed sleep and “brain fog.”

“The problem is a lot of the symptoms that a patient might come to a primary care physician complaining about could be many different things,” Hanson. “And what that primary care physician would really like to have would be a blood test.”

Blood samples were collected from ME/CFS patients and a control group of healthy, albeit sedentary, people. Then De Vlaminck’s team spun down the blood plasma to isolate and then sequence the RNA molecules that had been released during cellular damage and death.

They identified more than 700 significantly different transcripts between the ME/CFS cases and the control group. Those results were parsed by different machine-learning algorithms to develop a classifying tool that revealed signs of immune system dysregulation, extracellular matrix disorganization and T cell exhaustion in ME/CFS patients.

Using statistical analysis methods, they were able to map where the RNA molecules originated by deconvolving the patterns of gene expression based on known cell type-specific marker genes, as determined from a previous ME/CFS single-cell RNA sequencing study from the Grimson Lab at Cornell.

“We identified six cell types that were significantly different between ME/CFS cases and controls,” Gardella said. “The topmost elevated cell type in patients is the plasmacytoid dendritic cell. These are immune cells that are involved in producing type 1 interferons, which could indicate an overactive or prolonged antiviral immune response in patients. We also observed differences in monocytes, platelets and other T cell subsets, pointing to broad immune dysregulation in ME/CFS patients”

The cell-free RNA classifier models had 77% accuracy in detecting ME/CFS – not high enough for a diagnostic test yet, but a substantial leap forward in the field. The researchers are hopeful the approach can help them understand the complex biology behind other chronic illnesses, as well as differentiating ME/CFS from long COVID.

“While long COVID has raised awareness of infection-associated chronic conditions, it’s important to recognize ME/CFS, because it’s actually more common and more severe than many people might realize,” Gardella said. 

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the WE&ME Foundation. 

-30-

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Surprisingly diverse innovations led to dramatically cheaper solar panels

2025-08-11
CAMBRIDGE, MA – The cost of solar panels has dropped by more than 99 percent since the 1970s, enabling widespread adoption of photovoltaic systems that convert sunlight into electricity. A new MIT study drills down on specific innovations that enabled such dramatic cost reductions, revealing that technical advances across a web of diverse research efforts and industries played a pivotal role. The findings could help renewable energy companies make more effective R&D investment decisions and aid policymakers in identifying areas to prioritize to spur growth in manufacturing and deployment. The ...

Lab-made sugar-coated particle blocks Covid-19 infection — Possible new treatment on the horizon

2025-08-11
Groundbreaking research led by a Swansea University academic has revealed a synthetic glycosystem — a sugar-coated polymer nanoparticle — that can block Covid-19 from infecting human cells, reducing infection rates by nearly 99%. The glycosystem is a specially designed particle that mimics natural sugars found on human cells. These sugars, known as polysialosides, are made of repeating units of sialic acid — structures that viruses often target to begin infection. By copying this structure, the synthetic molecule acts as a decoy, binding to the virus’s spike protein and preventing it from attaching to real cells. Unlike vaccines, which trigger immune responses, ...

Rice’s dean of engineering and computing building new software infrastructure for evolutionary biology

2025-08-11
Rice University computer scientist Luay Nakhleh, who also serves as the dean of the George R. Brown School of Engineering and Computing, has received a $1.9 million grant from the National Science Foundation to build a powerful new software infrastructure that could significantly expand how scientists study evolution. The project, titled PhyNetPy, aims to bring the next generation of evolutionary modeling tools into the hands of researchers around the world by enabling the widespread use of phylogenetic networks — complex, ...

Researchers discover all-new antifungal drug candidate in McMaster’s greenhouse

2025-08-11
A research team at McMaster University has discovered a new drug class that could someday lead to breakthrough treatments for dangerous fungal infections. The new molecules, dubbed coniotins, were isolated from a plant-dwelling fungus called Coniochaeta hoffmannii — the samples of which were collected from the McMaster greenhouse, located on the university’s campus. Detailed recently in the journal Nature Communications, the discovery responds to a critical need for new antifungal medicines.    “There is a huge, growing clinical need for new drugs that target fungal infections,” says Gerry Wright, a ...

New quality control for ‘wonder material’ graphene oxide is cheapest and fastest yet

2025-08-11
Scientists have created new way to characterise graphene oxide (GO) cheaper and quicker than ever before, helping get the emerging technology out of the lab and into the market.  Researchers at King’s College London have designed an ‘interactional fingerprinting’ method that creates a unique identity of individual samples. By mimicking humans’ sense of taste and smell, the method can create a qualitative snapshot of the material without relying on inaccessible gold-standard measurement machinery manned by teams of specialists.   By promising a faster and cheaper way to quality control graphene oxide, the scientists ...

How organic matter traps water in soil — even in the driest conditions

2025-08-11
From lifelong farmers to backyard gardeners, most plant-lovers know that adding organic matter to a field, vegetable plot or flowerpot increases the soil’s moisture. Now, for the first time, Northwestern University scientists have uncovered the molecular mechanisms that enable organic matter to boost soil’s ability to retain water — even in desert-like conditions. Carbohydrates — key components of plants and microbes — act like a molecular glue, using water to form sticky bridges between organic molecules and soil minerals, the team found. These bridges lock in moisture that ...

Cancer center taps UTA expert for survivor health study

2025-08-11
A researcher at The University of Texas at Arlington is helping a leading national cancer center explore how wearable devices could help childhood cancer survivors avoid long-term health complications such as diabetes and heart disease. Yue Liao, assistant professor of kinesiology at UT Arlington, was invited by researchers at City of Hope, a National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center, to contribute to a review article published in Cancer. The article examines how survivors of childhood cancer face elevated risks of chronic conditions such as diabetes and how digital health tools could help detect—and possibly prevent—these ...

Big gains in type 1 diabetes glucose-control management in recent years

2025-08-11
A new study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health found big increases in the use of continuous glucose monitoring and insulin delivery devices by children and adults with type 1 diabetes over a 15-year period, with corresponding jumps in optimal blood-sugar control. For their study, the researchers used a large national database of de-identified electronic health records to analyze nearly 200,000 individuals with type 1 diabetes across five three-year periods from 2009 to 2023. The research team tracked individuals’ adoption of continuous ...

Researchers unlock safer RNA therapies for inflammatory diseases

2025-08-11
PHILADELPHIA – Lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) are tiny fat bubbles that are used to deliver medicines, genes, and RNA into cells. However, in some cases LNPs can cause harmful inflammation as a result of the process of RNA delivery. Now, two new solutions can help alleviate inflammation while still getting RNA where it needs to be in the cell. One discovery found that inflammation could be reduced with the addition of a unique biodegradable lipid to the treatment; another solution identified a common drug, called thiodigalactoside (TG), which blocked inflammation when added to the LNP. Today’s Nature Nanotechnology features this research from the Perelman ...

New gene linked to aggressive, treatment-resistant prostate cancer

2025-08-11
“These findings highlight that, in PC, RSPO2 functions as a unique member of the R-spondin family by promoting genes and signaling pathways associated with aggressive PC, and RSPO2 amplifications are associated with poor outcomes in PC patients.” BUFFALO, NY – August 11, 2025 – A new research paper was published in Volume 16 of Oncotarget on July 25, 2025, titled “Dissecting the functional differences and clinical features of R-spondin family members in metastatic prostate cancer.” In this study, researchers led by first ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Trauma or toxic? A deep dive into the impact of stress on kids' health

Turning industrial exhaust into useful materials with a new electrode

ORNL to partner with Type One Energy, UT on world-class facility to validate next-gen fusion

New journal section tackles AI, ethics, and digital health communication

Jeonbuk National University researchers develop novel dual-chemical looping method for efficient ammonia synthesis

New study sheds light on stroke recovery via exercise-induced migration of mitochondria

SEOULTECH researchers develop sodium-based next-generation smart electrochromic windows

Data-driven analysis reveals three archetypes of armed conflicts

Heart disease, stroke deaths down, yet still kill more in US than any other cause

Light switches made of ultra-thin semiconductor layers

Creative talent: has AI knocked humans out?

Sculpting complex, 3D nanostructures with a focused ion beam

A year after undermining Bredt’s rule, UCLA scientists have made cage-shaped, double-bonded molecules that defy expectations

Human activities drive global dryland greening

PeroCycle announces new appointments as it builds a world-class board for meaningful climate impact

Magnetic avalanches power solar flares

LeapSpace goes live: the Research-Grade AI-Assisted Workspace built on trusted science

DNA tests reveal mysterious beluga family trees

Strategic sex: Alaska’s beluga whales swap mates for long-term survival

How early cell membranes may have shaped the origins of life

Cannabis legalization is driving increases in marijuana use among U.S. adults with historically lower consumption rates

Multifunctional dipoles enabling enhanced ionic and electronic transport for high‑energy batteries

Triboelectric nanogenerators for future space missions

Advancing energy development with MBene: Chemical mechanism, AI, and applications in energy storage and harvesting

Heteroatom‑coordinated Fe–N4 catalysts for enhanced oxygen reduction in alkaline seawater zinc‑air batteries

Meta-device for precision lateral displacement sensing

Plasma-guided mitotane for the treatment of adrenocortical carcinoma: adjuvant care to advanced disease

Theoretical study of laser-enhanced nuclear fusion reactions

Social environment impacts sleep quality

Optimized kinetic pathways of active hydrogen generation at Cu2O/Cu heterojunction interfaces to enhance nitrate electroreduction to ammonia

[Press-News.org] Researchers identify key biomarkers for chronic fatigue syndrome