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T-cell malignancies are a group of highly aggressive hematologic tumors with high relapse rates and generally poor patient prognosis. A significant challenge arises because CD5, a characteristic marker of malignant T-cells, is also expressed on almost all normal T-cells. This makes CD5-targeting CAR-T therapies unable to distinguish friend from foe, leading them to attack normal T-cells and potentially cause immune function failure. Natural Killer (NK) cells, as key effector cells of the immune system, can recognize and eliminate tumor cells without prior antigen sensitization. Furthermore, their surface lacks CD5 expression, making them ideal effector cells for targeting CD5+ tumor cells.

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The tumor suppressor protein p16INK4a (p16) plays a critical role in cell cycle regulation by inhibiting CDK4/6 kinase activity, thereby preventing abnormal cell proliferation and acting as a natural "cancer guardian." However, in many cancers, the p16 gene is frequently inactivated by mutations. Missense mutations, in particular, lead to protein structural instability, making p16 prone to degradation or misfolding, and consequently, loss of its tumor-suppressive function. It is estimated that over half of familial melanomas and many sporadic tumors harbor p16 mutations. Traditional gene therapies or small-molecule drugs struggle to directly "fix" such structurally unstable proteins. Therefore, finding molecular chaperones that can stabilize mutant p16 has emerged as a new therapeutic direction.

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With the groundbreaking progress of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) in human cancer therapy, the demand for similar treatments in companion animals, such as dogs, is increasingly growing. Spontaneous canine tumors share high similarities with human tumors in terms of immune microenvironment, genetic background, and clinical progression, making them ideal translational medicine models. However, the market still lacks efficient and specific immunotherapeutic drugs targeting canine PD-L1. Most existing antibodies are derived from murine sources or are humanized, suffering from issues like strong immunogenicity, high production costs, and poor tissue penetration. Therefore, developing a novel canine PD-L1-targeting inhibitor based on Nanobodies (Nbs) holds promise not only for advancing veterinary oncology but also for providing valuable references for human immunotherapy research.

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Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV) is primarily categorized into HSV-1 and HSV-2. The former often causes oral herpes, while the latter is a major cause of genital herpes. Both viruses can disseminate to other organs or lead to severe, potentially fatal complications, including herpes keratitis, herpes encephalitis, neonatal herpes, among others. Existing therapeutics like acyclovir can only inhibit viral replication but cannot prevent latent infection or recurrence. Furthermore, as the viral glycoprotein B (gB) undergoes conformational changes, the number of drug-resistant viral strains continues to rise annually.