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Cells

Cells is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal on cell biology, molecular biology, and biophysics, published semimonthly online by MDPI.
The Nordic Autophagy Society (NAS), the Spanish Society of Hematology and Hemotherapy (SEHH) and the International Cell Death Society (ICDS) are affiliated with Cells and their members receive discounts on the article processing charges.
Indexed in PubMed | Quartile Ranking JCR - Q2 (Cell Biology)

All Articles (20,050)

Thermoregulatory dysfunction is a major pathophysiological consequence of aging, affecting many elderly individuals. Growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR) regulates energy homeostasis and immune function. We previously showed that global GHSR deletion improves thermogenic adaptation of brown adipose tissue (BAT) in aging, but the responsible cell type remained unclear. GHSR is expressed in macrophages, and its expression in macrophages increases with aging. Here, we studied myeloid-specific Ghsr-deleted male mice (LysM-Cre; Ghsrf/f denoted as “KO”) to assess their metabolic and immune responses to cold stress at young and old ages. Old mice showed impaired thermogenesis, marked by reduced core body temperature under 4 °C cold exposure, a blunted cold-induced increase in glucose levels, reduced BAT mass, and increased infiltration of pro-inflammatory CD38+ macrophages in BAT. In contrast, KO mice exhibited enhanced cold tolerance in both young and old mice. Notably, aged KO mice showed preserved BAT mass and a pronounced shift in resident macrophages toward an anti-inflammatory state. Consistently, aged KO mice showed reduced pro-inflammatory markers (Ccl2, Nos2) and increased expression of the thermogenic gene Ppargc1a and UCP1 protein under cold exposure. Together, these findings demonstrate that macrophage GHSR drives age-associated pro-inflammatory remodeling of BAT, and that its deletion promotes an immune environment favorable for thermogenic activation. Thus, targeting macrophage GHSR may offer a new therapeutic strategy to restore thermogenesis and enhance thermal resilience in aging.

9 February 2026

Old mice exhibit reduced thermogenic and glycemic response to cold stress. Young and old mice were either kept at room temperature (RT) or subjected to cold stress (CS) at 4 °C for 4 h. (A) Core body temperature measured during the 4-h cold exposure period at 4 °C; (B) Blood glucose (n = 6–8 mice/group); (C) Key liver enzymes: PCK1 and G6PC; (D) Body weight; (E) Percentages of epididymal, inguinal, and brown adipose tissues were measured. n = 5–14 mice/group, data are presented as mean ± SEM. * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, young vs. old. Statistical differences were assessed by independent t-test or two-way ANOVA followed by Tukey’s multiple comparisons test. Groups sharing the same letter are not significantly different, groups with different letters are significantly different (p < 0.05), and groups labeled “ab” do not differ significantly from groups labeled “a” or “b”.

The purpose of our study is to explore the potential of a transcription factor-based strategy for directly converting mouse fibroblasts into photoreceptor-like cells. The mouse cDNAs of Ascl, Crx, Ngn1, Nrl, and Otx2 were cloned into a modified commercial adenoviral vector. Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) were isolated from E13.5 embryos, and mouse postnatal fibroblasts (MPFs) were isolated from three-day-old mice. A pool of adenoviruses containing five genes was prepared to infect MEFs or MPFs once daily for two days. The MEFs or MPFs were incubated in a specific medium supplemented with forskolin and were changed every two days. After 7 or 14 days, the photoreceptor-like cells were assayed via immunofluorescence or polymerase chain reaction with reverse transcription (RT–PCR). The photoreceptor-like cells were then transplanted into adult C57BL/6 mouse retinas and were assessed by immunofluorescence 14 days following transplantation. Screening from a pool of five candidate genes, we reported that a combination of only three factors—Crx, Nrl, and Otx2—was sufficient to convert mouse embryonic and postnatal fibroblasts into photoreceptor-like cells. The induced photoreceptor-like cells expressed photoreceptor-specific proteins such as Recoverin, Rhodopsin, and Opsin and integrated into the outer nuclear layer of the retina following transplantation. This exploratory study provides preliminary evidence that fibroblasts can be directly converted into photoreceptor-like cells, suggesting a cellular model and potential source for future transplantation strategies aimed at retinal repair.

9 February 2026

Screen for photoreceptor-fate-inducing factors. (A) MEF preparation from E13.5 mice. Tissues with neurogenic potential (head, vertebral column, dorsal root ganglia, and internal organs) are removed as indicated. The remaining tissue is then processed for primary MEF culture. (B) Diagram depicting the transdifferentiation procedures of MEFs into photoreceptor-like cells by AAV delivery. The horizontal bar indicates the experimental timeline from Day -2 to Day 7–14. (C) Recoverin+ cells induced by Ascl1, Crx, Nrl, Ngn1, and Otx2 individually after seven days of infection. (D) Recoverin+ cells induced by ACNN1O pool after seven days of infection. Shown are a low-magnification field (left) and higher-magnification insets (middle and right) of the region outlined in the left panel. The middle inset is a merged image of DAPI (blue, nuclei) and Recoverin (red) staining; the right inset shows the Recoverin signal alone. Dapi (blue) shows nucleus. (Scale bar: 50 μm).

Breast cancer (BC) is a prevalent malignancy worldwide among women. HER2 overexpression in a subset of BC (HER2+ BC) serves as a critical oncogenic driver and contributes to immune evasion. The Raf Kinase Inhibitor Protein (RKIP), a metastasis suppressor and an immune enhancer, is underexpressed in HER2+ BC. The treatment of HER2+ BC with anti-HER2 mAbs or chemical inhibitors has resulted in significant clinical responses in a subset of patients; however, unresponsiveness in a larger subset was due to acquired and induced resistance. These findings highlight the need for the development of new effective therapies. By analyzing the signaling pathways mediated by both RKIP and HER2 in HER2+ BC, we have found that RKIP and HER2 downstream signaling and inductions showed an inverse relationship. These suggested the presence of a dysregulated RKIP-HER2 axis in HER2+ BC mediating immune evasion. These findings were corroborated by bioinformatic analyses. The immune evasion induced by the overexpression of HER2 was due, in part, to its regulation of the expression of PD-L1, the polarization of TAMs, the infiltration of suppressor cells (Tregs, MDSCs), and the inhibition of anti-tumor CD8+ T cells, resulting in an overall immunosuppressive TME. In contrast, RKIP expression inhibits critical signaling pathways that regulate HER2 expression, including the Raf-MEK-ERK, NF-kB, and PI3K/Akt pathways, thereby aborting HER2-mediated mechanisms of immune evasion. Overall, we analyzed the cross-talk signaling pathways between RKIP and HER2, established a novel dysregulated axis in HER2+ BC, and delineated the various mechanisms involved in the regulation of immune evasion by RKIP and HER2. Hence, we present various therapeutic strategies aimed at targeting the RKIP-HER2 axis in HER2+ BC to circumvent unresponsiveness to therapeutics and immune evasion.

8 February 2026

RKIP and HER2 cross-talk signaling. The MAPK, NF-κB, and Akt pathways regulated by HER2 expression are shown (⇢). RKIP blocks critical signaling pathways, such as the MAPK, NF-κB, and PI3K/Akt pathways () [144,145,146,147]. However, by inhibiting these signaling cascades, RKIP reduces HER2-related signaling [12,133,134,135,136]. This figure demonstrates the antagonistic relationship between RKIP and HER2 and the regulatory feedback loop they form. Additionally, it illustrates three common mechanisms by which RKIP and HER2 interact, influencing cancer treatment and HER2-mediated cell proliferation. Created with BioRender.com. Accessed on 1 November 2025.

Skeletal muscle is increasingly recognized as a dynamic endocrine and paracrine organ that communicates with distal tissues through a diverse secretome of peptides, proteins, metabolites, and extracellular vesicles (EVs), collectively referred to as myokines and exerkines. Beyond cataloging individual factors, emerging evidence suggests that muscle-derived signals can convey information through an integrated, context-dependent “endocrine code”—a pattern defined by secretion kinetics, co-released signal combinations, delivery modalities, and target-tissue receptor landscapes. This review synthesizes current evidence on (i) conceptual and experimental criteria for defining bona fide myokines, (ii) mechanisms governing myokine expression, processing, and release across exercise modes and physiological states, and (iii) major muscle–organ axes that connect physical activity to systemic metabolic homeostasis, immune remodeling, tissue regeneration, and neurocognitive adaptation. We further discuss non-protein mediators such as lactate, succinate, and β-aminoisobutyric acid, and highlight EVs as a multiplexed delivery modality whose interpretation requires stringent isolation, contamination controls, and functional validation. Finally, we evaluate translational opportunities—including biomarker panels, therapeutic targeting of the myostatin/activin, fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21), and growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) pathways, and precision exercise prescriptions informed by multi-omics and artificial intelligence—while emphasizing analytical standardization, causal validation, and transparent reporting as prerequisites for clinical impact.

8 February 2026

The “endocrine code” of skeletal muscle: inputs (exercise and context) are transduced by intracellular sensing and regulatory layers into coordinated outputs (protein myokines, metabokines/lipokines, and extracellular vesicle cargo) that act on target organs to shape system-level phenotypes.

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Cells - ISSN 2073-4409