This On-Sale Shampoo And Conditioner Is A ‘Must Have For Anyone Who Wants Their Silver Hair To Sparkle’

If you’ve ever had your hair dyed, your stylist likely recommended a particular shampoo and conditioner to keep your locks looking lush long after you leave their chair. Yet, if you’ve recently stopped dying your hair, are in the process of going gray or have been rocking the all-gray look for years, rest assured, there are special products for you, too.

In fact, there’s a shampoo and conditioner system designed to address the unique needs of natural gray and blonde hair: Luseta’s “Color Brightening” purple shampoo and conditioner. Coming in two 16.9-ounce bottles with an easy-pump top, users say it’s a salon-quality set for a budget price, which is even better today, as it’s currently 30% off, according to our price trackers.

Wherever you are on your “gray journey,” reviewers seem confident that this set will upgrade your hair in the best way.

Per the rave reviews from folks who’ve gone gray or are blonde, this set is the best on the market for keeping their un-colored strands feeling silky and looking “luminescent.” The pair is designed to balance out the naturally gray and blond hues while nourishing the strands for long-term hair health. Some call it their “hair savior,” saying it’s a “must-have for anyone who wants their silver hair to sparkle.” Others say that after using it, it looks “like there’s a spotlight shining on my hair.”

The shampoo formula addresses brassy and yellow hues, split ends and deep cleaning needs. Meanwhile, the conditioner works to restore moisture, protect and repair heat damage and environmental stress while topping the hair off with a glossy finish. Both products are also paraben-, sulfate- and gluten-free!

People with gray hair are especially reporting in droves that they’re seeing the big turnarounds in color and softness.

One reviewer who recently stopped coloring their hair after 30 years of dying wrote, “My hair has never felt so clean, soft, shiny” while a reviewer in their mid-sixties who’s been dye-free for 12 years said this duo made their hair “brighter and healthier in appearance.”

It seems nearly everyone who uses it agrees on the product’s brightening and de-brassing ability, noting their gray hair almost looks like shiny silver. Even a reviewer with self-described “stark white” hair gave the set 5 stars.

“I am completely amazed at how much it has toned down my bright white color,” they wrote. “Friends are even asking if I am again ‘coloring’ my hair. I am so pleased with the outcome. And it holds the “toning down” in between shampoos.”

Many say they came to this set after not wanting to keep shelling out for more expensive options, and have been positively surprised by the results. “The best affordable gray hair product I’ve used yet!” one wrote. “My hair is shiny, and feels very healthy,” nothing the conditioner doesn’t make their hair greasy.

Whether you’ve long been gray all the way or are just starting your journey, check out some of these 5-star reviews of the Luseta brightening purple shampoo and conditioner before grabbing yours on sale.

I cannot express the words to explain how truly amazing this product is!!!! I bleach out the front of my hair to keep it a white/blonde color and always have to redo the toner every 2 weeks. It’s rough and damaging on my hair. This shampoo and conditioner leave my hair so amazingly soft and healthy looking. The purple 💜 toner in the product works so perfectly that I’m not even having to use a toner to get that white look that I love. I’ve had so many compliments on in after just 1 week that it’s definitely my go to shampoo and conditioner routine from now on!! It came in THE cutest packaging with some adorable stickers in its own decorated little box. The only wish about this product I have is that I wish I had come across it sooner! I’d recommend this to anyone I know, thank you for putting this product out there!!!!”— HEATHERT

I have been a hairdresser for 22 years. I really love purple shampoo especially for my elderly clients. My mom is 70 now so I bought this for her. She is beautiful and her hair is silver and white. She is not a smoker and her hair is not yellow however I still really like this product a lot to keep her hair bright. This was a good size bottle for her because she has arthritis. I showed a picture of the product we live in Colorado so I think because of the shipping in elevation be careful when you open the bottle. The product smells good it doesn’t stain the hair shaft. I would highly recommend this If you are a platinum blonde or if you have gray and silver hair. It’s also great for people who want that purple/ gray Hair color that is trending right now. I would even back part for my clients. All in all I am very pleased with this product and will buy it again for her when she runs out. Great product for a great price :-)” — HBD

Didn’t know that you are supposed to treat your hair differently when you are on your gray journey, but come to find out you are and this purple shampoo and conditioner has helped me tremendously. It is smelling like a man that’s sent smells good though it’s just masculine but when you finish your hair so soft and on top of all that your grays are silver like shiny so I guess I’ll give it a big thumbs up” — Happy customer

Looking for products for thicker hair? Check out this collection of highly-rated prodcuts by Senior Shopping Writer, Tessa Flores.

Amazon

Hair-building fibers

Reviewers call this bottle of hair-building fibers “a best kept secret” for making hair appear instantly thicker while also concealing bald spots and grays. The fibers, which are made of a keratin protein, work by clinging to existing hair strands for a seamless look and a performance that’s resistant to rain, wind or sweat. It’s available in nine hair colors.

Heads up: At Walgreens, these are BOGO 50% off for a limited time.

Promising Amazon reviews:Amazing best kept secret! Most folks have never heard of these hair fibers but they really work! When I pull my hair back into a pony tail, the baby hair along the front of my face is thin and a few gray hairs popping in. All you see is my scalp and looks bad so I ordered these hair fibers and with a little sprinkle, you can not see the obvious part that looks like a bald spot!
My husband uses the gray fiber because he has some thinning on the top of his scalp. The hair fibers makes his hair look so much fuller and can’t see through to his scalp! We both do not use it on a daily basis. Just when we know we will be taking pictures and/or social events. No gimmicks here…works like a charm! A little sprinkle goes a long way! Highly recommend!” — Penny T.

“My hair has thinned around my temples and this product was recommended to me by my hair stylist. I love it! It allows me to wear my hair up it a pony tail without looking thin around the hairline. It’s also great for when my gray roots start coming in and I have a couple days until my next hair appointment. Life saver!” — Jackie Gringle

Sephora

A peptide-infused shampoo for thinning hair

This gentle purifying shampoo claims to visibly thicken and strengthen hair from root to tip using, while also eliminating buildup on the scalp. Hyaluronic acid hydrates and thickens, while ceramides aid in promoting strand elasticity and a gluco-peptide reduces future breakage and hair is strong enough to grow.

Promising Sephora review: “”Definitely stuck on this one now! This makes my hair look and feel thicker and it makes it feel soft too. There’s no gross smell or feel when you use it and I think it’s worth the price.” — kilianm

Amazon

A root cover spray

This popular hair spray is marketed as a solution to temporarily cover grays in between dye jobs, but reviewers also claim that it can help make hair appear thicker by concealing areas where hair is thinner and the scalp is more noticeable. The lightweight formula claims to be water- and smudge-resistant, residue-free and quick-drying. It comes in up to 11 shades that wash out easily on your next shampoo.

Promising Amazon review:I’m a senior with thinning hair and this spray works great. Just be sure to hold it only 4″ approx from your scalp and spray for2-3 seconds and move to a new spot on your head where your scalp is showing thru or your roots are showing. Don’t hold too far away from your scalp and don’t hold it in one spot. It will feel cold, but that stops almost as soon as you are done spraying that spot. It dries in min. It also thickens your hair so your hair will look fuller. Your fingers may get a little spray on them, but it washes right off with a bit of soap. Also this does wash out if you don’t like it. It washes out easily.” — Jan S-dell

Amazon

A weightless volumizing mousse

This isn’t the first notable product from Color Wow, the hair care brand known for the viral Dream Coat anti-humidity spray. The Xtra Large Bombshell Volumizer is a weightless pre-styling foam that’s made from a proprietary polymer and bamboo that thickens tresses and adds a flexible body. The non-drying formula also doubles as a heat-protectant and promises to leave a glossy and bouncy finish that’s free from any sticky residue.

Promising Amazon reviews: “I have tried many products for thin hair but this is the first one that actually worked. My hair looks so much better and thicker and it even looks almost cute when I wake up in the morning because it’s going everywhere and looking thick. That is a first I am now a regular customer” — Theresa Bailey

Amazon

A pre-styling thickening tonic

Aveda’s thickening tonic claims to expand hair strands from root to tip using an organic wheat-based and botanical formula. Just apply the product on towel-dried hair prior to styling for a result that can add visual fullness to tresses in just one use.

Promising Nordstrom review: “I was skeptical and had to think about it a couple of weeks before I ordered. As I age my hair is really thinning to the point you can see my scalp. I have used the Aveda Thickening Tonic daily for a week and I can notice a difference when I use a blow dryer and lightly dry it then shake the bottle well and apply it. I tried applying it to damp, towel dried hair but didn’t get as good results as when I lightly dried it. I will purchase again, so that is a great recommendation from me!” — MeMe4AnJ

The Real Deal: We use deal trackers and commerce experience to sift through “fake” hike-and-drop deals and other deceptive sales tactics. Products will usually be rated at least 4 stars with a minimum 15% discount. (And when there’s an exception, we’ll tell you why.)

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‘We weren’t perfect’, says bogus Covid lab accused

Evidence in pharmacist Faisal Shoukat’s defence continues to be heard at Bradford Crown Court.

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Bridgerton Newcomer Yerin Ha Teases 1 Major Difference In Season 4

Previously, every Bridgerton sibling who fronted their season has found romance in their own upper classes. Season four, though, is taking a bit of a different approach with its lead love story.

This latest run of episodes will see Luke Thompson’s Benedict Bridgerton becoming enamoured with a mysterious “Lady In Silver” at a masquerade ball.

Little does he know, the woman he has fallen for is Yerin Ha’s Sophie, who works as a maid for the demanding Lady Araminta Gun (played by Katie Leung).

Unlike Daphne’s romance with Simon, the Duke of Hastings, Colin’s relationship with childhood friend Penelope, or Anthony and Kate Sharma’s marriage, this pairing sees love forming through a class divide.

While maids have existed in the show, including Lorraine Ashbourne’s Mrs Varley, they have always played a background role when it comes to the romance.

Luke Thompson and Yerin Ha play the new central couple in Bridgerton's fourth season
Luke Thompson and Yerin Ha play the new central couple in Bridgerton’s fourth season

LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX

Newcomer Yerin Ha thinks it’s a “blessing” to see the Netflix show explore an upstairs-downstairs style romance.

“I think it just really opens up whole new doors for Bridgerton. I think it grounds, it makes it more realistic-ish. It’s less pretty and shiny and glamorous, which I think is quite nice,” Yerin told Metro.

“It’s the fourth season now, so it’s nice to have a change of energy and pace. I’m excited for the audiences to see that.”

Luke Thompson, who has been in the period drama since the first series, agreed with his on-screen love interest and appreciated the show taking a different direction in its fourth series.

“It’s sort of baked into the story, in a way, isn’t it? In a story that does seem to be about fantasy and reality, it is about the performance of the Tom and then suddenly you get a stronger flavour of the real world in Bridgerton, what reality means in Bridgerton, which I think is really interesting, because the Ton world can feel like a bit of a bubble sometimes,” he said.

Adjoa Andoh, who plays Lady Danbury, also praised season four for its “freshness” and for exploring the class divide in British society.

“Our show is not a sociology project, but even to discuss class in this way is really lovely to see,” she said. “What does keep the glittering household going? It’s those people downstairs. So what are their lives like and what happens when the two worlds actually cross over?” Adjoa added.

Bridgerton season four, part one premieres on Thursday January 29 on Netflix.

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Aspirin prices ‘rise 1,000%’ amid supply shortage

Pharmacists say the cost to buy a box of aspirin from suppliers was 38p but is now around £7.

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AI model from Google’s DeepMind reads recipe for life in DNA

It could transform our understanding of why diseases develop and the medicines needed to treat them, says researchers.

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Low-Earth orbit is just 2.8 days from disaster

The phrase “House of Cards” is often linked today with a popular Netflix political series, but its original meaning describes something far more literal: a structure that can collapse easily. That idea is exactly how Sarah Thiele, formerly a PhD student at the University of British Columbia and now a researcher at Princeton, and her colleagues characterize today’s massive satellite networks. In a new paper available as a pre print on arXiv, they argue that modern satellite mega constellations rest on an unstable foundation.

Their reasoning is backed by striking numbers. Across all Low Earth Orbit mega constellations, satellites pass dangerously close to one another with surprising frequency. A “close approach,” defined as two satellites coming within less than 1km of each other, happens about once every 22 seconds. Within the Starlink network alone, this occurs roughly every 11 minutes. To avoid collisions, each Starlink satellite must carry out an average of 41 course corrections every year.

When Rare Events Become Serious Risks

At first glance, this constant maneuvering might sound like proof that the system is working as intended. Engineers, however, know that failures often come from unusual situations rather than everyday operations. These rare scenarios, often called “edge cases,” can expose weaknesses that routine conditions never reveal. According to the study, solar storms are one such scenario that poses a serious threat to satellite mega constellations.

Solar storms typically disrupt satellites in two main ways.

How Solar Storms Disrupt Satellites

The first effect is atmospheric heating. When a solar storm hits Earth, it causes the upper atmosphere to expand and thicken, increasing drag on satellites. This added resistance forces satellites to burn more fuel just to stay in orbit and raises uncertainty about their precise positions. As a result, satellites must perform additional avoidance maneuvers to prevent collisions. During the “Gannon Storm” of May 2024 (which, unfortunately, appears not to be named after the Zelda villain), more than half of all satellites in LEO were forced to expend fuel on these adjustments.

The second effect can be even more damaging. Solar storms can interfere with or disable satellite navigation and communication systems altogether. When that happens, satellites may be unable to respond to threats in their path. Combined with higher atmospheric drag and increased uncertainty, this loss of control could quickly lead to a serious accident.

Measuring the Speed of Disaster

The most widely known outcome of widespread satellite collisions is Kessler syndrome. In this scenario, debris from collisions accumulates around Earth, making it nearly impossible to launch spacecraft without them being destroyed. While Kessler syndrome unfolds over decades, the researchers wanted to show how quickly a crisis could begin. To do this, they introduced a new measurement called the Collision Realization and Significant Harm (CRASH) Clock.

Using this metric, the authors calculated that as of June 2025, a complete loss of command over satellite avoidance maneuvers would result in a catastrophic collision in about 2.8 days. In contrast, similar conditions in 2018, before the rise of mega constellations, would have allowed roughly 121 days before such a collision occurred. The risk becomes even more alarming over shorter periods. Losing control for just 24 hours carries a 30% chance of a major collision that could kick off the long chain reaction leading to Kessler syndrome.

Little Warning and Few Options

One of the most troubling aspects of solar storms is how little notice they provide. In many cases, warnings come only a day or two in advance. Even with that notice, there are limited actions operators can take beyond trying to protect vulnerable systems. Solar storms create a rapidly changing atmospheric environment that requires constant, real time monitoring and control. If that real time control is lost, the paper suggests there may be only a few days to restore it before the entire system collapses.

This concern is not hypothetical. The 2024 Gannon Storm was the strongest solar storm in decades, but it was not the most powerful on record. That distinction belongs to the Carrington Event of 1859. If a storm of similar strength occurred today, it could disrupt satellite control for far longer than three days. A single event like this, which has already happened once in recorded history, could severely damage global satellite infrastructure and confine humanity to Earth for the foreseeable future.

Weighing the Risks of a Connected Sky

Few readers would welcome a future cut off from space. While satellite mega constellations offer enormous technological benefits, they also introduce serious long term risks. A realistic understanding of those dangers is essential. When the potential outcome includes losing access to space for generations due to one extreme solar storm, informed decision making becomes critical. This research provides a clearer picture of what is at stake and why the risks can no longer be ignored.

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4 Ways To Strengthen Your ‘Psychological Immune System’

You probably have some idea about how to help your immune system. Eating well, exercising, and getting enough of certain vitamins can help.

But what about your “psychological immune system”?

The term, which was first coined in the ’90s, suggests our minds could have protective mechanisms, including cognitive “antibodies,” similar to those which protect us from phsyical disease.

Here, we asked Dr William Van Gordon, Associate Professor in Contemplative Psychology at the University of Derby, what the term means, as well as how to strengthen ours.

What is the “psychological immune system”?

“The psychological immune system is a concept developed by psychologists Daniel Gilbert and Timothy Wilson in the late 1990s.

“It describes the brain’s automatic, largely unconscious defences that protect emotional well-being in the face of negative events, much like how the physical immune system fights pathogens,” Dr Van Gordon told us.

Some feel that having a stronger “psychological immune system” can help us to weather negative events, even those you anticipate would be devastating.

“These processes help us to reframe setbacks positively, restore self-worth, diminish the intensity and duration of distress, and recover more quickly than we typically predict,” the professor added.

“We often overestimate how devastated we will feel after failures, rejections, or losses because we underestimate this built-in resilience system.”

How can I boost my “psychological immune system”?

Dr Van Gordon shared “four strategies that can strengthen your psychological immune system and improve emotional recovery and calmness”.

These are:

1) Shift from negative to neutral

“Counter the brain’s natural negativity bias by deliberately moving toward a balanced, neutral perspective rather than trying to force positivity,” the professor said.

Our mind’s negativity bias means we pay more attention to negative thoughts and experiences than we do positive ones, potentially skewing our views.

“Use simple grounding tools such as brief mantras (‘This too shall pass’), short gratitude reflections, recalling times you’ve overcome similar challenges, or slow diaphragmatic breathing to calm the nervous system.”

2) Anchor in the present

“Focus attention on what is controllable right now to interrupt rumination about the past or anxiety about the future,” said the expert.

“Build small daily habits of mindfulness (for example, one to two minutes of breath awareness), protect sleep quality to restore cognitive clarity, and create routines that break negative thought loops and restore motivation, such as morning journaling or quick walks.”

3) Reconnect with meaning and purpose

“When adversity strikes, reframe the situation through your core values or long-term goals; for example, by viewing a difficult experience as an opportunity to grow skills or character,” he continued.

Having a longer-term sense of purpose has been linked to greater longevity, mental health benefits aside.

“Practise self-compassion, seek trusted perspectives from others, or visualise how the challenge fits into a bigger, meaningful picture.”

4) Practise healthy acceptance

“Allow difficult emotions to arise without suppression or denial, especially after significant loss or trauma,” Dr Van Gordon ended.

“Recognise that feelings such as sadness or anger carry important signals; treat yourself kindly during the process and, if distress persists, consider professional support rather than forcing ‘positive thinking’ alone.”

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Dark stars could solve three major mysteries of the early universe

A new study led by Colgate Assistant Professor of Physics and Astronomy Cosmin Ilie, working with Jillian Paulin ’23 of the University of Pennsylvania, Andreea Petric of the Space Telescope Science Institute, and Katherine Freese of the University of Texas at Austin, proposes a single idea that could address three major mysteries from the universe’s earliest era. The researchers suggest that dark stars may help explain the appearance of unexpectedly bright “blue monster” galaxies, the presence of very massive black holes at extremely early times, and the strange objects known as “little red dots” seen in images from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).

The earliest stars formed in regions dominated by dark matter, specifically at the centers of small dark matter structures called microhalos. Several hundred million light-years after the Big Bang, clouds made of hydrogen and helium cooled enough to begin collapsing under their own gravity. This process led to the birth of the first stars and marked the start of the cosmic dawn, a formative period in the universe’s history.

During this time, conditions may have allowed a rare type of star to form. These stars could be powered not only by nuclear fusion, but also by energy released when dark matter particles annihilate. Known as dark stars, such objects could grow to enormous sizes and may naturally evolve into the seeds that later become supermassive black holes.

JWST Reveals Unexpected Early Galaxies

JWST has now observed the most distant objects ever studied, offering an unprecedented look at the early universe. These observations have challenged long standing theories about how the first stars and galaxies formed. One of the most surprising findings is a large population of galaxies known as “blue monsters.” These galaxies are extremely bright, very compact, and contain little to no dust.

Before JWST, no simulations or theoretical models predicted that galaxies with these properties should exist so early in cosmic history. Their discovery has forced astronomers to reconsider how quickly stars and galaxies could have formed.

Overmassive Black Holes and Little Red Dots

JWST data have also intensified an ongoing mystery involving supermassive black holes. Some of the earliest observed galaxies appear to host black holes that are far larger than expected for their age. Explaining how the seeds of these larger-than-expected supermassive black holes (SMBHs) formed so quickly remains a major challenge.

In addition, JWST has revealed a new category of compact objects known as “little red dots” (LRDs). These dust-free sources date back to cosmic dawn and are unusual because they emit little to no X-ray radiation, something astronomers did not anticipate based on existing models.

Why Current Models Fall Short

Taken together, the blue monster galaxies, early overmassive black holes, and little red dots point to serious gaps in pre-JWST theories of early galaxy and black hole formation. The findings suggest that widely accepted models need substantial updates to account for what JWST is now seeing.

“Some of the most significant mysteries posed by the JWST’s cosmic dawn data are in fact features of the dark star theory,” Ilie said.

Growing Evidence for Dark Stars

Although dark stars have not yet been confirmed through direct observation, the new study strengthens the case for their existence. It builds on photometric and spectroscopic dark star candidates identified in two separate PNAS studies published in 2023 and 2025, respectively.

The authors describe in detail how dark stars could account for the properties of blue monster galaxies, little red dots, and early galaxies hosting massive black holes. The paper also presents the most recent spectroscopic analysis, reporting evidence for distinctive helium absorption features in the spectrum of JADES-GS-13-0. A similar feature had previously been identified in JADES-GS-14-0.

Why Dark Stars Matter

Dark stars are among the most intriguing theoretical objects in modern astrophysics. If confirmed, they could offer a way to directly probe the properties of dark matter particles. This would complement ongoing efforts to detect dark matter in laboratory experiments on Earth, whether through direct detection or particle production, and could help connect cosmic observations with fundamental physics.

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The hidden reason cancer immunotherapy often fails

Cancer immunotherapy has reshaped cancer treatment by training the body’s immune system to recognize and attack tumors. Drugs known as immune checkpoint inhibitors, which target the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway, have led to long-lasting responses in some patients and fueled optimism about durable cancer control. Yet for most people, these therapies do not deliver the same benefit. Tumors can adapt and develop ways to escape immune detection, limiting the effectiveness of treatment.

This challenge has pushed researchers to look beyond the tumor itself and examine broader mechanisms of immune resistance. Scientists are increasingly focused on how cancers suppress immune activity throughout the body, not just at the tumor site. One emerging area of interest involves small extracellular vesicles (sEVs), tiny particles released by cancer cells that can carry immunosuppressive molecules and weaken the immune response in ways that are still not fully understood.

Investigating How PD-L1 Is Packaged and Released

To better understand this process, a research team from Fujita Health University in Japan, led by Professor Kunihiro Tsuchida, worked with collaborators from Tokyo Medical University Hospital and Tokyo Medical University. Their goal was to uncover how PD-L1, a key immune checkpoint protein, is selectively loaded into sEVs and to determine whether this pathway could be targeted therapeutically.

The study, published in Scientific Reports, was built around a central unanswered question. “Cancer cells release small extracellular vesicles containing PD-L1, which are thought to reduce the effectiveness of cancer immunotherapy. However, how PD-L1 is sorted into these vesicles has remained unclear.” Addressing this mystery became the foundation of the research.

A New Molecular Player in Immune Resistance

Using a wide range of techniques, including molecular and cell biology, biochemical and pharmacological tests, patient-derived samples, and bioinformatics, the researchers identified ubiquitin-like 3 (UBL3) as a key factor controlling how PD-L1 is directed into sEVs.

They found that PD-L1 undergoes a previously unknown post-translational modification involving UBL3. This modification occurs through a disulfide bond and differs from the classical process of ubiquitination. Further experiments showed that a specific amino acid, cysteine 272 in the cytoplasmic region of PD-L1, is essential for this modification.

When UBL3 levels were increased in cancer cells, the amount of PD-L1 packaged into sEVs rose sharply, even though total PD-L1 inside the cells remained unchanged. In contrast, reducing UBL3 levels led to a clear drop in PD-L1 being loaded into vesicles and released outside the cell. Together, these results confirmed that UBL3 plays a central role in directing PD-L1 into sEVs.

Statins Interfere With a Key Immune Escape Pathway

One of the most striking findings came when the team examined drugs that might interfere with this process. They discovered that statins, which are widely prescribed to lower cholesterol, strongly block UBL3 modification. All clinically used statins tested in the study reduced UBL3 activity, lowered PD-L1 modification, and sharply decreased the amount of PD-L1 sorted into sEVs.

These effects occurred at very low drug concentrations that are achievable in patients and were not linked to toxic effects on cells. Importantly, blood samples from people with non-small cell lung cancer showed a similar pattern. Among patients with high tumor PD-L1 expression, those taking statins had significantly lower levels of PD-L1-containing sEVs in their blood compared with patients not using statins.

Further bioinformatic analysis revealed that the combined expression of UBL3 and PD-L1 was associated with survival outcomes in lung cancer patients. This finding highlights the potential clinical importance of this newly identified regulatory pathway.

What This Means for Cancer Treatment

Taken together, these results help explain why immune checkpoint inhibitors often fail and point to a practical way to improve their performance. The study uncovers a hidden mechanism by which cancer cells spread immunosuppressive PD-L1 through extracellular vesicles, allowing tumors to weaken immune responses far beyond their immediate environment.

Linking this pathway to statins is especially important because these drugs are widely used, inexpensive, and generally safe. This raises the possibility that the findings could be translated into clinical practice relatively quickly. As the researchers note, “In the long term, this research may lead to more effective and accessible cancer immunotherapies. It could help more patients benefit from immune checkpoint treatments, improving survival and quality of life in real-world settings.”

A New Target for Overcoming Immunotherapy Resistance

In summary, the study shows that UBL3-driven modification promotes the packaging of PD-L1 into sEVs and that statins can disrupt this process, reducing levels of circulating immunosuppressive PD-L1. By identifying vesicle-associated PD-L1 trafficking as a modifiable driver of immune escape, the research opens a promising new path for tackling resistance to cancer immunotherapy. Adding statins to combination treatment strategies could offer a simple, scalable way to improve outcomes for patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors.

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Millionaire GP behind asylum seeker hotels

A firm founded by a GP tried to evict 100 people from flats while planning to move asylum seekers in.

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