Bacteria are often painted as our adversaries, but when it comes to oil spills, toxic chemicals, and radioactive waste, they could be what save us from ourselves.
Dr. Kamal Ranadive’s 104th BirthdayToday’s (google's) Doodle celebrates Indian cell biologist Dr. Kamal Ranadive, who is best known for her groundbreaking cancer research and devotion to creating a more equitable society through science and education.
Kamal Ranadive was an Indian biomedical researcher who is known for her research in cancer about the links between cancers and viruses. She was a founder member of the Indian Women Scientists' Association.
According to new research conducted on mice, this could be because our immune system keeps a record of these past afflictions, creating a personalized disease pattern in each individual. Understanding more about how and why this happens could open up new opportunities for treating the disorder.
This latest study zooms in on the T cellsin mice's bodies, white blood cells that are key to the immune system. In particular, the T cells in the synovium – the tissue lining the inside of the capsule around each joint – appear to hold a memory of previous RA problems.
Overwhelmingly, flares occur in a previously involved joint. The study shows that these T cells anchor themselves in the joints and stick around indefinitely after the flare is over, waiting for another trigger. If you delete these cells, arthritis flares stop.
This was demonstrated through two mouse models using chemical triggers to cause joint inflammation and one mouse model using a genetic trigger to generate the same effect: The researchers removed a protein that blocked the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1.
These triggers caused T cells to rally other cells to the immunity cause, leading to arthritis flare-ups in specific joints in the mice. When these T cells were taken out, additional inflammation was prevented. These T cells don't move between joints and take up "long-term residency" where they are, the researchers say, ready to be reactivated again.
The approach taken here was actually inspired by skin studies. T cells with a form of memory are known to reside in the skin, leading to repeating patterns in skin problems such aspsoriasis. It also happens with reactions to nickel in jewelry or wristwatches.
The research team thinks that other types of autoimmune arthritis could work in the same way, which could lead to better treatments and approaches to these issues. The next step is to confirm that the same process happens in humans and find out ways to target it.
The "teapot effect" has been threatening spotless white tablecloths for ages: if a liquid is poured out of a teapot too slowly, then the flow of liquid sometimes does not detach itself from the teapot, finding its way into the cup, but dribbles down at the outside of the teapot.
This phenomenon has been studied scientifically for decades—now a research team has succeeded in describing the "teapot effect" completely and in detail with an elaborate theoretical analysis and numerous experiments: An interplay of different forces keeps a tiny amount of liquid directly at the edge, and this is sufficient to redirect the flow of liquid under certain conditions.
The "teapot effect" was first described by Markus Reiner in 1956.
So rheology is the science of flow behavior. Again and again, scientists have tried to explain this effect precisely. Although this is a very common and seemingly simple effect, it is remarkably difficult to explain it exactly within the framework of fluid mechanics.
The sharp edge on the underside of the teapot beak plays the most important role: a drop forms, the area directly below the edge always remains wet. The size of this drop depends on the speed at which the liquid flows out of the teapot. If the speed is lower than a critical threshold, this drop can direct the entire flow around the edge and dribbles down on the outside wall of the teapot.
Researchers have now succeeded for the first time in providing a complete theoretical explanation of why this drop forms and why the underside of the edge always remains wetted.
The mathematics behind it is complicated—it is an interplay of inertia, viscous and capillary forces. The inertial force ensures that the fluid tends to maintain its original direction, while the capillary forces slow the fluid down right at the beak. The interaction of these forces is the basis of the teapot effect. However, the capillary forces ensure that the effect only starts at a very specific contact angle between the wall and the liquid surface. The smaller this angle is or the more hydrophilic (i.e. wettable) the material of the teapot is, the more the detachment of the liquid from the teapot is slowed down.
Interestingly, the strength of gravity in relation to the other forces that occur does not play a decisive role. Gravity merely determines the direction in which the jet is directed, but its strength is not decisive for the teapot effect. The teapot effect would therefore also be observed when drinking tea on a moon base, but not on a space station with no gravity at all.
B. Scheichl et al, Developed liquid film passing a smoothed and wedge-shaped trailing edge: small-scale analysis and the 'teapot effect' at large Reynolds numbers, Journal of Fluid Mechanics (2021). DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2021.612
We don’t ‘believe in’ Newton’s laws. We trust them and accepted them because there is genuine evidence that they work.
Newton's laws of motion are three laws of classical mechanics that describe the relationship between the motion of an object and the forces acting on it. These laws can be paraphrased as follows (1):
Law 1. A body continues in its state of rest, or in uniform motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by a force.
Law 2. A body acted upon by a force moves in such a manner that the time rate of change of momentum equals the force.
Law 3. If two bodies exert forces on each other, these forces are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction.
Newton's laws were verified by experiment and observation for over 200 years, and they are excellent approximations at the scales and speeds of everyday life.
Epilepsy and autism spectrum disorders, or ASD, show a remarkable degree of comorbidity and may share pathological mechanisms. Questions that have bogged down scientists about these disorders include: Does autism lead to an increase in epilepsy? Or does epilepsy alter the brain circuit, which then leads to autism?
One hypothesis is that during brain development, inhibitory neurons, which regulate brain rhythms, develop in an abnormal manner. If this is true, then how the brain circuit gets set up is abnormal, which may lead to both autism and epilepsy.
unlike excitatory neurons that lead to a forward propagation of information, inhibitory neurons work like a brake by suppressing and sculpting the activity of downstream neurons.
The researchers generated mice with a global mutation in all cells that prevented the inhibitory neurons from migrating to their normal location in mature brain circuits. Not surprisingly, they found a reduction in inhibitory currents in the hippocampus, a region of the brain known for memory function. Notably, the mutant mice showed behavioral traits associated with ASD and were more prone to seizures.
Results of the study suggest that a common underlying defect in circuit formation could contribute to both ASD and epilepsy.
Carol Eisenberg et al, Reduced hippocampal inhibition and enhanced autism-epilepsy comorbidity in mice lacking neuropilin 2, Translational Psychiatry (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41398-021-01655-6
A team of researchers has developed a modified textile that can keep skin cooler than materials made of cotton. In their paper published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, the group describes their approach to developing garments that are cooler when worn in outdoor conditions.
The researchers noted that silk does a good job of reflecting sunlight in the mid-infrared range, which suggests it could be suitable as a cooling garment material. But because it is made by spiders, it contains a protein component that tends to absorbultraviolet radiation, making the material and its wearer grow hotter underdirect sunlight.
To make the silk material UV reflective, the researchers dipped a standard piece of silk fabric into a liquid solution containing highly refractive inorganic oxide nanoparticles. These adhered to thesilkfabric, allowing it to become evenly saturated throughout the material. They allowed the fabric to dry and then tested it to see if the addition of the nanoparticles made the material more UV reflective. They found that under peak sunlight conditions, the temperature under the material was approximately 3.5 degrees Celsius cooler than the ambient air temperature. Next, they placed the material on a patch of simulated skin and found the skin temperature was approximately 8 degrees Celsius cooler than the same type of simulated skin without the material covering. They also found that it kept the artificial skin approximately 12.5 degrees Celsius cooler than standard cotton material. Further testing showed that the material was able to reflect approximately 95% of sunlight, preventing it from passing through to the skin underneath.
Bin Zhu et al, Subambient daytime radiative cooling textile based on nanoprocessed silk, Nature Nanotechnology (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41565-021-00987-0
White-taileddeer found to be huge reservoir of coronavirus infection
New research from the US has shown that white-tailed deer are being infected with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19 in humans. Antibodies were found in40% of deerthat were tested from January to March 2021 across Michigan, Pennsylvania, Illinois and New York state.A second unpublished studyhas detected the virus in 80% of deer sampled in Iowa between November 2020 and January 2021.
Such high levels of infection led the researchers to conclude that deer are actively transmitting the virus to one another. The scientists also identified different SARS-CoV-2 variants, suggesting there have been many human-to-deer infections.
The large numbers of white-tailed deer in North America and the fact that they often live close to people provide several opportunities for the disease to move between the two species. This can include wildlife management operations, field research, recreation, tourism and hunting. In fact, hunters are likely to be one of the most obvious sources of potential reinfection as they regularly handle dead animals. It has also been suggested that water sources contaminated with SARS-CoV-2 might provide a pathway for transmission, although this has yet to be proved.
Human-to-deer and deer-to-deer transmission are believed to be driving the rapid spread of the disease within white-tailed deer populations across the US. This is particularly apparent during the early months of 2021 when COVID infections were spiking in the human population. Previous studies have shown that SARS-CoV-2 can be passed from humans to domestic and captive animals including cats, dogs, zoo animals and, most notably, farmed mink. But, until now, the disease had not been shown to spread in wildlife species.
There is the possibility that viral mutation in a reservoir host, such as white-tailed deer, could lead to new variants of the disease. These variants may lead to greater infection rates, increased virulence (severity of symptoms) and prove more effective at evading the human immune system. Likewise, any reinfection from wildlife reservoirs could also complicate our long-term efforts to fight and suppress the disease.
Humans are guilty of breaking an oceanic law of nature: study
A new international study has examined the distribution of biomass across all life in the oceans, from bacteria to whales. Their quantification of human impact reveals a fundamental alteration to one of life's largest scale patterns.
Scientists have used advances in ocean observation and large meta-analyses to show that human impacts have already had major consequences for the larger oceanic species, and have dramatically changed one of life's largest scale patterns—a pattern encompassing the entire ocean's biodiversity, from bacteria to whales.
Early samples of marine plankton biomass from 50 years ago led researchers to hypothesize that roughly equal amounts of biomass occur at all sizes. For example, although bacteria are 23 orders of magnitude smaller than a blue whale, they are also 23 orders of magnitude more abundant. This size-spectrum hypothesis has since remained unchallenged, even though it was never verified globally from bacteria to whales. The authors of the study, published in the journalScience Advances,sought to test this hypothesis on a global scale for the first time. They used historical reconstructions and marine ecosystem models to estimate biomass before industrial scale fishing got underway (pre-1850) and compared this data to the present-day.
One of the biggest challenges to comparing organismsspanning bacteria to whales is the enormous differences in scale.
The ratio of their masses is equivalent to that between a human being and the entire Earth. Researchers estimated organisms at the small end of the scale from more than 200,000 water samples collected globally, but larger marine life required completely different methods.
Their approach focused on 12 major groups of aquatic life over roughly 33,000 grid points of the ocean. Evaluating the pre-industrial ocean conditions (pre-1850) largely confirmed the original hypothesis: There is a remarkably constant biomass across size classes.
Researchers were amazed to see that each order of magnitude size class contains approximately 1 gigaton of biomass globally.
While bacteria are over-represented in the cold, dark regions of the ocean, the largest whales are relatively rare, thus highlighting exceptions from the original hypothesis.
In contrast with an even biomass spectrum in the pre-1850 ocean, an investigation of the spectrum at present revealed human impacts on ocean biomass through a new lens. While fishing and whaling only account for less than 3 percent of human food consumption, their effect on the biomass spectrum is devastating: large fish and marine mammals such as dolphins have experienced a biomass loss of 2 Gt (60% reduction), with the largest whales suffering an unsettling almost 90% decimation. The authors estimate that these losses already outpace potentialbiomasslosses even under extreme climate change scenarios.
Humans have impacted the ocean in a more dramatic fashion than merely capturing fish. It seems that we have broken the size spectrum—one of the largest power law distributions known in nature. These results provide a new quantitative perspective on the extent to which anthropogenic activities have altered life at the global scale.
Ian A. Hatton et al, The global ocean size spectrum from bacteria to whales, Science Advances (2021). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abh3732
Nuclear radiation used to transmit digital data wirelessly
Engineers have successfully transferred digitally encoded information wirelessly using nuclear radiation instead of conventional technology.
Radio waves and mobile phone signals relies onelectromagnetic radiationfor communication but in a new development, engineers from Lancaster University in the UK, working with the Jožef Stefan Institute in Slovenia, transferred digitally encoded information using "fast neutrons" instead.
The researchers measured the spontaneous emission of fast neutrons from californium-252, a radioactive isotope produced in nuclear reactors.
Modulated emissions were measured using a detector and recorded on a laptop.
Several examples of information, i.e., a word, the alphabet and a random number selected blindly, were encoded serially into the modulation of the neutron field and the output decoded on a laptop which recovered the encoded information on screen.
A double-blind test was performed in which a number derived from arandom numbergenerator was encoded without prior knowledge of those uploading it, and then transmitted and decoded.
All transmission tests attempted proved to be 100% successful.
Malcolm J. Joyce et al, Wireless information transfer with fast neutrons, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment (2021). DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2021.165946
What does mindfulness mean to you? Is it about being aware of what comes your way without distraction? Or is it engaging with life's challenges without judgement, and responding as required?
A new meta-analysis of almost 150 studies has found that most of us understand that mindfulness is about both being aware and engaging with whatever comes our way. Unfortunately, we're much worse at putting this 'engaging' part into action.
Scientific understanding of mindfulness goes beyond mere stress-relief and requires a willingness to engage with stressors. It is, in fact, the engagement with stressors that ultimately results in stress relief. More specifically, mindfulness includes two main dimensions: awareness and acceptance.
Mindfulness derives from Buddhist traditions, and has become used in Western settings since the 1970s as part of psychiatry and psychology. It has been shown to help reduce depression, stress, anxiety, and even drug addiction, and is regularly recommended as a coping mechanism as part of therapy.
In terms of regular people's understanding of mindfulness, we're really good at the 'awareness' part, the researchers say – where we take stock of what's around us, and any potential issues coming our way.
But the team found that we then tend to use mindfulness as a passive endorsement of the experience: the mindfulness equivalent of a shrug emoji.
What we should do to get the full benefits of mindfulness is engage with our experiences, finding solutions and responses to our environment – something that the researchers found that we're aware of, but we just don't do.
"These modern applications of mindfulness have recently faced substantial criticism. Scholars suggest that popular definitions cast mindfulness as a 'quick fix' for suffering rather than a longitudinal practice of re-orienting, re-framing, and engaging with daily experience," the team writes in their paper.
The team looked at 145 datasets, in total covering 41,966 participants who did the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire. The five facets are observing, describing, acting with awareness, non-judging inner experience and non-reactivity to inner experience.
What the team found was that there was little 'convergence' across these facets across participants in non-clinical settings. Put simply, we're not embracing the whole package.
Researchers found that people seem to conceptually understand that mindfulness involves engagement, the general public is not walking the talk. Our results suggest that laypeople may understand what awareness is, but the next step of acceptance may not be well understood – limiting potential for engaging with problems.
Some people can’t get current COVID-19 vaccines for health reasons, butprotein-based vaccines offer hope that they might soon be immunized. To elicit a protective immune response, these shots deliver proteins, along with immunity-stimulating adjuvants, directly to a person’s cells, rather than sending in a fragment of genetic code that the cells must read to synthesize the proteins themselves. After months of quality-control setbacks and manufacturing delays, the protein-based jab from US biotechnology firm Novavax has just received itsfirst emergency-use authorization, in Indonesia. Meanwhile, Clover Biopharmaceuticals, based in China, and Biological E in India are on track to file for authorization in various countries in the coming weeks and months.
https://mcusercontent.com/2c6057c528fdc6f73fa196d9d/images/eadad212..." alt="Protein vaccines 101: An infographic that shows how COVID-19 protein-based vaccines are made, and how the body reacts to them."/>
Giant Study Identifies The Best Time to Fall Asleep to Lower Risk of Heart Problems
While the link between sleep and a healthy heart is well established, researchers are still sussing out the details. A new study suggests there might even be an optimal time, within our 24-hour body clock, for falling asleep.
Of course, the reasons for not obtaining the right sleep, whether it's thebest amountorright timingarenot always within our control. So anyone struggling with their sleep should seek medical advice and focus on whatever they need to do that works for them – as dictating a specific bedtime may be counterproductive for some.
But for the rest of us it may be helpful to know that falling asleep between 10-11 pm seems to hit the sweet spot for a healthy cardiovascular system.
The body has a 24-hour internal clock, called circadian rhythm, that helps regulate physical and mental functioning. While we cannot conclude causation from our study, the results suggest that early or late bedtimes may be more likely to disrupt the body clock, with adverse consequences for cardiovascular health.
The team found falling asleep after midnight or before 10 pm both was associated with around a 25 percent increase in risk of cardiovascular disease, compared to falling asleep between 10-11 pm. This increase in risk dropped to 12 percent for those who fell asleep between 11-12 pm.
"The riskiest time was after midnight, potentially because it may reduce the likelihood of seeing morning light, which resets the body clock.
This trend remained when taking into account age, gender, sleep duration, being an early bird or night owl, smoking status, weight, diabetes, blood pressure, cholesterol level, and socioeconomic status. It was also more pronounced for women, but the researchers aren't yet sure why.
Glitter is a bane of modern living. But beyond its general annoyance factor, it's also made of toxic and unsustainable materials, and contributes to plastic pollution.
Now, researchers from the University of Cambridge have found a way to make sustainable, non-toxic, vegan, and biodegradable glitter from cellulose—the main building block of cell walls in plants, fruits and vegetables—and that's just as sparkly as the original.
The glitter is made fromcellulose nanocrystals, which can bend light in such a way to createvivid colorsthrough a process called structural color. The same phenomenon produces some of the brightest colors in nature—such as those of butterfly wings and peacock feathers—and results in hues which do not fade, even after a century.
Using self-assembly techniques which allow the cellulose to produce intensely-colored films, the researchers say their materials could be used to replace the plastic glitter particles and tiny mineral effect pigments which are widely used in cosmetics.
The films of cellulose nanocrystals prepared by the team can be made at scale using roll-to-roll processes like those used to make paper from wood pulp, and this is the first time these materials have been fabricated at industrial scale. The results are reported in the journal Nature Materials.
'Dancing molecules' successfully repair severe spinal cord injuries in mice
Researchers have developed a new injectable therapy that harnesses "dancing molecules" to reverse paralysis and repair tissue after severe spinal cord injuries.
In a new study, researchers administered a single injection to tissues surrounding the spinal cords of paralyzed mice. Just four weeks later, the animals regained the ability to walk.
The research will be published in the Nov. 12 issue of the journalScience.
By sending bioactive signals to triggercellsto repair and regenerate, the breakthrough therapy dramatically improved severely injured spinal cords in five key ways: (1) The severed extensions of neurons, called axons, regenerated; (2) scar tissue, which can create a physical barrier to regeneration and repair, significantly diminished; (3) myelin, the insulating layer of axons that is important in transmittingelectrical signalsefficiently, reformed around cells; (4) functional blood vessels formed to deliver nutrients to cells at theinjurysite; and (5) more motor neurons survived.
After the therapy performs its function, the materials biodegrade into nutrients for the cells within 12 weeks and then completely disappear from the body without noticeable side effects. This is the first study in which researchers controlled the collective motion of molecules through changes in chemical structure to increase a therapeutic's efficacy.
The secret behind Stupp's new breakthrough therapeutic is tuning the motion of molecules, so they can find and properly engage constantly moving cellular receptors. Injected as a liquid, the therapy immediately gels into a complex network of nanofibers that mimic the extracellular matrix of the spinal cord. By matching the matrix's structure, mimicking the motion of biological molecules and incorporating signals for receptors, the synthetic materials are able to communicate with cells.
Once connected to the receptors, the moving molecules trigger two cascading signals, both of which are critical to spinal cord repair. One signal prompts the long tails of neurons in the spinal cord, called axons, to regenerate. Similar to electrical cables, axons send signals between the brain and the rest of the body. Severing or damaging axons can result in the loss of feeling in the body or even paralysis. Repairing axons, on the other hand, increases communication between the body and brain.
The second signal helps neurons survive after injury because it causes other cell types to proliferate, promoting the regrowth of lost blood vessels that feed neurons and critical cells for tissue repair. The therapy also induces myelin to rebuild around axons and reduces glial scarring, which acts as a physical barrier that prevents the spinal cord from healing.
The signals used in the study mimic the natural proteins that are needed to induce the desired biological responses. While the new therapy could be used to prevent paralysis after major trauma (automobile accidents, falls, sports accidents and gunshot wounds) as well as from diseases, researchers think the underlying discovery—that "supramolecular motion" is a key factor in bioactivity—can be applied to other therapies and targets.
Scientists appeal for immediate climate action at COP26
More than 200 scientists told the COP26 summit Thursday to take immediate action to halt global warming, warning in an open letter that some climate change impacts were "irreversible" for generations.
The central task of the Glasgow meeting is to implement the Paris Agreement, with its goal of limiting temperature rise to between 1.5 and 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.
But as negotiations enter their final days, commitments made so far could still lead to "catastrophic" warming of as much as 2.7C by 2100, according to the UN.
"We,climate scientists, stress that immediate, strong, rapid, sustained and large-scale actions are necessary," to keep warming within the Paris target, said the letter, signed by researchers across the world.
In August, a bombshell "code red" report from the world's top climate science body, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), warned that Earth's average temperature will hit the 1.5C threshold around 2030, a decade earlier than projected only three years ago.
To keep from overshooting that temperature target the IPCC says emissions must fall 45 percent this decade.
Thursday'sopen letter, signed by some of the IPCC's report authors, calls on delegates in Glasgow to "fully acknowledge" the scientific evidence they have compiled of the severe threats posed by climate change.
"Cumulative greenhouse gas emissions to date already commit our planet to key changes of the climate system affecting human society and marine and terrestrial ecosystems, some of which are irreversible for generations to come," said the letter.
A University of Florida research team is helping to build the case that coronaviruses move between animals and people at a more frequent rate than previously understood. Earlier this year, the team reported the first known instance of a coronavirus common in pigs to have "spilled over" into people. Spillovers refer to events where a virus that is adapted to a certain kind of hostsay, a dog, or pigacquires features that allow it to infect an entirely different species of host, such as a person. In their newest work, the team retrospectively uncovered an instance where a coronavirus known from dogs, called a canine coronavirus, infected at least one person visiting Haiti in early 2017. The infected person had a mild illness with fever and fatigue. The new work published in Clinical Infectious Diseases on Oct. 28,2021. In an unusual twist, the virus was determined to closely match a canine coronavirus reported earlier in 2021.
There's a Strange Difference Between Human Brains And Those of Other Mammals
When it comes to the world of mammals, humans tend to stand out a fair bit.
While many animals share some aspects of our intelligence, they don't take it to the same level we have. But pinning down why we're more cognitively advanced on a neurological level has been tricky; to date, studies have found no significant differences between the brains of mammals. Now, we finally have a lead.
A team of researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has found that, compared to other mammals, human brains have a much lower number of the neuronal channels that allow the flow of ions such as calcium, potassium, and sodium.
This flow produces the electrical impulses that allow neurons to communicate with each other; having fewer of them could mean that the human brain can operate more efficiently, diverting resources to more complex cognitive functions.
One of their findings concerned dendrites, the branching structures at the tips of nerve cells through which the brain's electrical impulses are received via ion channels. From here, the dendrite generates what we call an action potential, which transfers the signal onwards.
When comparing the brains of the two species, the researchers found that the human dendrites had a marked lower density of these ion channels compared to rat dendrites. This was worth investigating further.
The new research has been expanded to include 10 species: shrew, mouse, gerbil, rat, ferret, guinea pig, rabbit, marmoset, macaque and, of course, human, using samples of tissue excised from epilepsy patients during brain surgery.
An analysis of the physical structure of these brains revealed that ion channel density increases with neuron size, with one notable exception: the human brain.
This, the researchers concluded, was to maintain ion channel density across a range of brain sizes; so, although the shrew had a higher number of neurons than the rabbit or the macaque in a given volume of brain, the density of ion channels in that volume was consistent.
"This building plan is consistent across nine different mammalian species. What it looks like the cortex is trying to do is keep the numbers of ion channels per unit volume the same across all the species. This means that for a given volume of cortex, the energetic cost is the same, at least for ion channels.
The exceptionally low ion channel density in the human brain was glaring, when compared with all the other brains.
All the comparison animals were significantly smaller than humans, of course, so it may be worth testing the samples of even larger animals. However, the macaque is oftenused in research as a modelfor the human brain.
The researchers suspect anevolutionary trade-offis possible for humans – this is when a biological system loses or diminishes a trait for an optimization elsewhere.
For example, it takes energy to pump ions through dendrites. By minimizing ion channel density, the human brain may have been able to deploy the energy savings elsewhere – perhaps in more complex synaptic connections, or more rapid action potentials.
"If the brain can save energy by reducing the density of ion channels, it can spend that energy on other neuronal or circuit processes
Researchers think that humans have evolved out of this building plan that was previously restricting the size of cortex, and they figured out a way to become more energetically efficient, so you spend lessATP [energy molecules] per volume compared to other species."
This finding reveals, the researchers said, an intriguing avenue for further investigation. In future research, the team hopes to explore the evolutionary pressures that might have led to this difference, and isolate where, exactly, that extra brain energy is going.
The Matilda effect is a bias against acknowledging the achievements of those women scientists whose work is attributed to their male colleagues. This effect was first described by suffragist and abolitionist Matilda Joslyn Gage (1826–98) in her essay, "Woman as Inventor" (first published as a tract in 1870 and in the North American Review in 1883). The term "Matilda effect" was coined in 1993 by science historian Margaret W. Rossiter. Rossiter provides several examples of this effect. Trotula (Trota of Salerno), a 12th-century Italian woman physician, wrote books which, after her death, were attributed to male authors. Nineteenth- and twentieth-century cases illustrating the Matilda effect include those of Nettie Stevens, Lise Meitner, Marietta Blau, Rosalind Franklin, and Jocelyn Bell Burnell. The Matilda effect was compared to the Matthew effect, whereby an eminent scientist often gets more credit than a comparatively unknown researcher, even if their work is shared or similar.
Introduced birds are not replacing roles of human-caused extinct species: study
Human-caused bird extinctions are driving losses of functional diversity on islands worldwide, and the gaps they leave behind are not being filled by introduced (alien) species, finds a new study.
The study, published in Science Advances, shows how human impacts such as habitat destruction and climate change are impoverishing ecosystems, even on islands where alien birds actually outnumber the species that have gone extinct.
Humans have drastically changed bird communities, not only by driving animals to extinction but also by introducing species into new habitats across the globe. There has been some debate as to whether introduced species might replace the roles of the extinct species, thus maintaining functional diversity within the ecosystem; here, researchers found that is unfortunately not the case.
Valuable functions that may be lost with bird extinctions can include pollination and seed dispersal, which can have cascading harmful effects on other species.
Some groups of birds have been particularly successful at establishing outside their natural areas—for example, many species of parrot and starling. Because of this, islands are becoming more homogeneous as the same kind of birds are established everywhere.
These new findings add to evidence that conservation efforts should be focused on preserving functionally distinct threatened species, to stem the tide of harmful losses to biodiversity that are driven by human actions. Huge numbers of species are being driven to extinction by human-driven effects such as habitat loss and climate change, so it is vital that we act now to reduce our negative impact on global biodiversity.
For this study, the researchers compiled an exhaustive list of all bird species that have been present in nine different archipelagos* before and after human-caused extinctions occurred. This covered 1,302 bird species, including 265 globally or locally extinct, and 355 established introductions from 143 separate species. In addition, the scientists visited different museum collections, including the Natural History Museum, to measure several morphological traits in skin or skeleton specimens. With this data, the researchers were able to quantify the trait diversity before and after bird extinctions, and identify the ecological niches extinct birds once filled.
The research team found that before human arrival, islandbird communitieswere more morphologically diverse than they are today. Their findings show how human-driven extinctions have disproportionally affected some types of birds (for example, larger birds and flightless birds are more likely to go extinct), leading to the loss of certain ecological roles.
The researchers also found that different archipelagos are becoming more and more similar in terms of trait diversity as native birds go extinct and the same kind of alien species are being newly established in many places.
Researchers discover link between dietary fat and the spread of cancer
A new study uncovers how palmitic acid alters the cancer genome, increasing the likelihood the cancer will spread. Researchers have started developing therapies that interrupt this process and say a clinical trial could start in the next couple of years. Metastasis—or the spread—of cancer remains the main cause of death in cancer patients and the vast majority of people with metastatic cancer can only be treated, but not cured. Fatty acids are the building blocks of fat in our body and the food we eat. Metastasis is promoted by fatty acids in our diet, but it has been unclear how this works and whether all fatty acids contribute to metastasis. Newly published findings reveal that one such fatty acid commonly found in palm oil, called palmitic acid, promotes metastasis in oral carcinomas and melanoma skin cancer in mice. Other fatty acids called oleic acid and linoleic acid—omega-9 and omega-6 fats found in foods such as olive oil and flaxseeds—did not show the same effect. Neither of the fatty acids tested increased the risk of developing cancer in the first place. The research found that when palmitic acid was supplemented into the diet of mice, it not only contributed to metastasis, but also exerts long-term effects on the genome. Cancer cells that had only been exposed to palmitic acid in the diet for a short period of time remained highly metastatic even when the palmitic acid had been removed from the diet. The researchers discovered that this "memory" is caused by epigenetic changes—changes to how our genes function. The epigenetic changes alter the function of metastatic cancer cells and allow them to form a neural network around the tumor to communicate with cells in their immediate environment and to spread more easily. By understanding the nature of this communication, the researchers uncovered a way to block it and are now in the process of planning a clinical trial to stop metastasis in different types of cancer.
New research helps explain the genetic basis for why we look the way we do
Which genes control the defining features that make us look as we do? And how do they make it happen?
In 1990, University of California San Diego biologist William McGinnis conducted a seminal experiment that helped scientists unravel how high-level control genes called Hox genes shape our appearance features. The "McGinnis experiment" helped pave the way for understanding the role of Hox genes in determining the uniform appearances of species, from humans to chimpanzees to flies.
McGinnis, a professor emeritus of Cell and Developmental Biology and former dean of the Division of Biological Sciences, helped discover a defining DNA region that he termed the "homeobox," a sequence within genes that directs anatomical development. Since the now-famous McGinnis experiment, evolutionary and developmental biologists have pondered how these highly influential Hox genes determine the identities of different body regions.
More than three decades later, a study published in Science Advances and led by Ankush Auradkar, a UC San Diego postdoctoral scholar mentored by coauthor McGinnis and study senior author Ethan Bier, helps answer questions about how Hox genes function.
The now-textbook McGinnis experiment tested whether the proteins produced by a human or mouse Hox gene could function in flies. Following in these footsteps, the new study leveraged modern CRISPR gene editing to investigate whether all aspects of Hox gene function, which consists of both protein coding and control regions, could be replaced in a common laboratory fruit fly (Drosophila melanogaster) with its counterpart from a rarer Hawaiian cousin (Drosophila mimica), which has a very different face.
Ankush Auradkar, Emily A. Bulger, Sushil Devkota, William McGinnis, Ethan Bier.Dissecting the evolutionary role of the Hox gene proboscipedia in Drosophila mouthpart diversification by full locus replacement.Science Advances, 2021; 7 (46) DOI:10.1126/sciadv.abk1003
The gene in question, proboscipedia, would plainly reveal itself since it directs the formation of strikingly different mouth parts—smooth and spongy in D. mel but more grill-like (resembling the face of the alien in Predator science fiction films) in D. mim.
Study coauthor Emily Bulger first collected the notoriously difficult-to-breed D. mim samples from Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park, along with the only native fruit (Sapindus saponaria—Hawaiian soapberry) that the insects are known to eat, in order to establish a temporary colony in Bier's laboratory. Auradkar then collaborated with coauthor Sushil Devkota to decipher the genome sequence of the D. mim proboscipedia gene, which was nearly 44,000 bases long. The researchers then deleted the D. mel proboscipedia gene and replaced it with the D. mim version of the same.
As McGinnis had predicted, the new results revealed that the graceful facial structure of D. mel emerged as the "winner" over the rough features of D. mim. One trait of D. mim, however, did surface during the experiment: Sensory organs called maxillary palps that stick out from the face in D. mel instead ran parallel to feeding mouthparts as they do in D. mim. Auradkar used sophisticated genetic tools to determine the basis for this difference and tracked it down to a change in the pattern by which the proboscipedia gene is activated (control region changes).
The experiment's results help answer longstanding questions about whether Hox genes function as "master" regulatory genes that dictate different body parts in organisms. Or, as McGinnis proposed, whether Hox genes instead provide abstract positional codes and serve as scaffolds for downstream genes that best benefit the organism. Other than the maxillary palps, the new results demonstrated that McGinnis' scaffolding idea proved to be the case.
McGinnis says that beyond the implications for evolutionary biology, the results could help explain developmental issues rooted in fundamental human genetic processes.
"These fly studies provide a window into deep evolutionary time and inform us about the mechanisms by which body plans change during evolution," said Bier. "These insights may lead to a better of understanding of processes tied to congenital birth defects in humans. With the advent of powerful new CRISPR-based genome editing systems for human therapy on the horizon, new strategies might be formulated to mitigate some of the effects of these often debilitating conditions."
Researchers may have unlocked function of mysterious structure found on neurons
For 30 years, mysterious clusters of proteins found on the cell body of neurons in the hippocampus, a part of the brain, both intrigued and baffled James Trimmer.
Now, the distinguished professor of physiology and membrane biology at the UC Davis School of Medicine may finally have an answer. In a new study published in PNAS, Trimmer and his colleagues reveal these protein clusters are calcium signaling "hotspots" in the neuron that play a crucial role in activating gene transcription.
Transcription allows portions of the neuron's DNA to be "transcribed" into strands of RNA that are then used to create the proteins needed by the cell.
Structures found in many animals Trimmer's lab studies the enigmatic clusters in mice, but they exist in invertebrates and all vertebrates—including humans. Trimmer estimates that there can be 50 to 100 of these large clusters on a single neuron.
He and his colleagues knew that the clusters are formed by a protein that passes potassium ions through membranes (a potassium channel). They also knew these clusters contain a particular type of calcium channel. Calcium channels allow calcium to enter cells, where it triggers a variety of physiological responses depending on the type of cell.
"The presence of these clusters in neurons is highly conserved," Trimmer said. Highly conserved features are relatively unchanged through evolutionary timescales, suggesting they have an important functional property in these very different types of animals.
The hippocampus, one region of the brain where the clusters are found on neurons, plays a major role in learning and memory. Researchers knew that disruption to these clusters—for example, from genetic mutations in the potassium channel—results in severe neurological disorders. But it was not clear why.
"We have known the function of other types of ion channel clusters, for example those at synapses, for a long time. However, there was no known role that these much larger structures on the cell body played in the physiology of the neuron," Trimmer said.
Experiment flooded calcium channels with 'decoys' The experiment that revealed the function of the neuronal clusters was designed by Nicholas C. Vierra, a postdoctoral researcher in Trimmer's lab and lead author for the study.
"We developed an approach that let us uncouple the calcium channel from the potassium channel clusters in neurons. A key finding was that this treatment blocked calcium-triggered gene expression. This suggests that the calcium channel-potassium channel partnership at these clusters is important for neuronal function," Vierra said.
For their experiment, the researchers essentially "tricked" the calcium channels at these clusters by flooding the neurons with decoy potassium channel fragments. When the calcium channels grabbed onto the decoys instead of the real potassium channels, they fell away from the clusters.
As a result, the process known as excitation-transcription coupling, which links changes in neuronal electrical activity to changes in gene expression, was inactivated.
"There are a lot of different calcium channels, but the particular type of calcium channel found at these clusters is necessary for converting changes in electrical activity to changes in gene expression," Trimmer said. "We found that if you interfere with the calcium-signaling proteins located at these unusual clusters, you basically eliminate excitation-transcription coupling, which is critical for learning, memory, and other forms of neuronal plasticity."
Trimmer and Vierra hope their findings will open new avenues of research.
"A lot of research has focused on calcium signaling in dendrites—the sites where neurons receive signals from other neurons. Calcium signaling in the cell body of neurons has received less attention," said Vierra. "Now we understand much more about the significance of signaling at these specific sites on the cell body of the neuron."
"We are only at the beginning of understanding the significance of this signaling, but these new results may provide information that could shape new research into its role in brain function, and perhaps eventually into the development of new classes of therapeutics," said Trimmer.
Additional authors on the study include Samantha C. O'Dwyer, Collin Matsumoto and L. Fernando Santana, Department of Physiology and Membrane Biology, UC Davis School of Medicine.
Every mammal hosts a hidden community of other organisms—the microbiome. Their intestines teem with complex microbial populations that are critical for nutrition, fighting disease and degrading harmful toxins. Throughout their lives, mammals are exposed to countless microbes through their food and environment, but only a small subset take up permanent residence in the host. Although scientists agree that diet, geography and evolutionary history structure the microbiome, the relative influence of each factor is a mystery. No rigorous study has investigated all three at once in wild mammal populations. Until now.
A team of University of Utah biologists analyzed the bacteria in the gutmicrobiomeof woodrats (Neotomaspecies), a group of closely related herbivorous rodents abundant in the southwestern United States. The animals offered a unique opportunity to test how diet, geography and evolutionary history influence microbiome structure. The many woodrat species are morphologically similar, but populations live in a variety of habitats and have distinct diets. Woodrats are famous for eating extremely toxic plants and do so with support from specialized gut bacteria.
Woodrats are amazing—they have incredibly diverse diets. Individuals from the same species eat different foods at different locations, so it creates a natural experiment. It's hard to say what's driving their different microbiomes—is it what they're eating? Is it where they're living? Or is it who they are?
The researchers used DNA barcoding techniques to characterize the diet and gut bacteria of seven woodrat species from 25 populations at 19 locations across the southwestern U.S. The biologists then brought the rodents into captivity, fed them a diet of rabbit chow for one month and then resampled their microbiome. The results show that in both wild and captive individuals, evolutionary history was the biggest predictor of microbiome structure—more than diet and geography.
Microbiome stability and structure is governed by host phylogeny over diet and geography in woodrats (Neotoma spp.), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2021). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2108787118.
In wild populations, diet and geography did influence microbiome composition and diversity.
Diet contributed to natural microbiome structure. The authors collected feces from each rodent at the time of capture to get a snapshot of their diet. Using these samples, they found that animals with more diverse diets had more diverse microbiomes, and animals that fed on similar plants also showed similarities in their microbial communities.
Geography also played a role. The authors found that individuals at the same site had more similar microbiomes, and these communities became more dissimilar as animals were sampled at more distant locations.
However, host relatedness was still the most important factor predicting the microbial makeup of these wild mammals. And these effects only increased when animals were in captivity.
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While every individual experienced a large shift, each individual's microbiome was still closer to its wild self than it would be to any other woodrat species. Researchers didn't see microbiomes merging into the same makeup; species retained distinct bacterial communities. With the differences of diet and habitat removed, they saw even more clearly the extent to which host relatedness influences microbiome structure.
The research team also found that microbiome responses to captivity were species specific, suggesting that host evolutionary history influences not only microbiome structure, but also stability.
Prions get mostly bad press, but they may be the keys to controlling protein synthesis in cells.
Prions, proteins that can misfold and aggregate, have been implicated in many neurodegenerative diseases. Yet some prions are involved in storing long term memories. New models by scientists describe how they can regulate the translation of RNA messages into new proteins by forming organized protein synthesis factories.
Vectorial channeling as a mechanism for translational control by functional prions and condensates, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2021). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2115904118.
Where does gold come from?—New insights into element synthesis in the universe
How are chemical elements produced in our Universe? Where do heavy elements like gold and uranium come from? Using computer simulations, a research team shows that the synthesis of heavy elements is typical for certain black holes with orbiting matter accumulations, so-called accretion disks.
All heavy elements on Earth today were formed under extreme conditions in astrophysical environments: inside stars, in stellar explosions, and during the collision of neutron stars. Researchers are intrigued with the question in which of these astrophysical events the appropriate conditions for the formation of the heaviest elements, such as gold or uranium, exist. The spectacular first observation of gravitational waves and electromagnetic radiation originating from a neutron star merger in 2017 suggested that many heavy elements can be produced and released in these cosmic collisions. However, the question remains open as to when and why the material is ejected and whether there may be other scenarios in which heavy elements can be produced.
Promising candidates for heavy element production are black holes orbited by an accretion disk of dense and hot matter. Such a system is formed both after the merger of two massive neutron stars and during a so-called collapsar, the collapse and subsequent explosion of a rotating star.
Researchers systematically investigated for the first time the conversion rates of neutrons and protons for a large number of disk configurations by means of elaborate computer simulations, and we found that the disks are very rich in neutrons as long as certain conditions are met
Promising candidates for heavy element production are black holes orbited by an accretion disk of dense and hot matter. Such a system is formed both after the merger of two massive neutron stars and during a so-called collapsar, the collapse and subsequent explosion of a rotating star. The internal composition of such accretion disks has so far not been well understood, particularly with respect to the conditions under which an excess of neutrons forms. A high number of neutrons is a basic requirement for the synthesis of heavy elements, as it enables the rapid neutron-capture process or r-process. Nearly massless neutrinos play a key role in this process, as they enable conversion between protons and neutrons.
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The decisive factor is the total mass of the disk. The more massive the disk, the more often neutrons are formed from protons through capture of electrons under emission of neutrinos, and are available for the synthesis of heavy elements by means of the r-process. However, if the mass of the disk is too high, the inverse reaction plays an increased role so that more neutrinos are recaptured by neutrons before they leave the disk. These neutrons are then converted back to protons, which hinders the r-process." As the study shows, the optimal disk mass for prolific production of heavy elements is about 0.01 to 0.1 solar masses. The result provides strong evidence that neutron star mergers producing accretion disks with these exact masses could be the point of origin for a large fraction of the heavy elements. However, whether and how frequently such accretion disks occur in collapsar systems is currently unclear.
In addition to the possible processes of mass ejection, the research group led by Dr. Andreas Bauswein is also investigating the light signals generated by the ejected matter, which will be used to infer the mass and composition of the ejected matter in future observations of colliding neutron stars. An important building block for correctly reading these light signals is accurate knowledge of the masses and other properties of the newly formed elements.
O Just et al, Neutrino absorption and other physics dependencies in neutrino-cooled black hole accretion disks, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (2021). DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab2861
New gene identified that contributes to progression to type 1 diabetes
When the pro-inflammatory pair, a receptor called CCR2 and its ligand CCL-2, get together, it increases the risk of developing type 1 diabetes, scientists report.
In this autoimmune disease that typically surfaces in childhood, the interaction of this natural lock and key recruits immune cells to the pancreas, which attack the insulin-producing islet cells, resulting in a lifelong course of insulin therapy and a lifelong increased risk of other health problems like heart and kidney disease.
The study, published in the Journal of Translational Autoimmunity, provides evidence the CCR2 gene promotes progression to type 1 as it provides new insight on how to delay disease progression.
The new study focused on 42 individuals who persistently had antibodies against the insulin-producing islet cells but never actually developed type 1, 48 who did develop type 1 and the remainder who did neither and served as thecontrol group.
They found that blood levels of CCL-2, the ligand for CCR2, were lower in both individuals who had antibodies but not actual disease as well as those who progressed to type 1 diabetes.
They also found that both these groups have more of the receptors on their immune cells, which get recruited by the ligand to the six-inch organ in the abdomen that helps us break down the food we eat.
Conversely, less receptors mean less recruitment of immune cells, more normal levels of CCL-2 in the blood and less cell destruction.
Paul MH. Tran et al, The 3p21.31 genetic locus promotes progression to type 1 diabetes through the CCR2/CCL2 pathway, Journal of Translational Autoimmunity (2021). DOI: 10.1016/j.jtauto.2021.100127
Neuroscientists illuminate how brain cells 'navigate' in the light and dark
To navigate successfully in an environment, you need to continuously track the speed and direction of your head, even in the dark. Researchers have discovered how individual and networks of cells in an area of the brain called the retrosplenial cortex encode this angular head motion in mice to enable navigation both during the day and at night.
One of the main aims of this study is to understand how the brain uses external and internal information to tell the difference between allocentric and egocentric-based motion. This paper is the first step in helping us understand whether individual cells actually have access to both self-motion and, when available, the resultant external visual motion signals.
The researchers found that the retrosplenial cortexuses vestibular signals to encode the speed and direction of the head. However, when the lights are on, the coding of head motion is significantly more accurate.
When the lights are on, visual landmarks are available to better estimate your own speed (at which your head is moving). If you can't very reliably encode your head turning speed, then you very quickly lose your sense of direction. This might explain why, particularly in novel environments, we become much worse at navigating once the lights are turned out.
To understand how the brain enables navigation with and without visual cues, the researchers recorded from neurons across all layers in the retrosplenial cortex as the animals were free to roam around a large arena. This enabled the neuroscientists to identify neurons in the brain called angular head velocity (AHV) cells, which track the speed and direction of the head.
This work showed that a single cell can see both kinds of signals: vestibular and visual. What was also critically important was the development of a behavioral task that enabled the scientists to determine that mice improve their estimation of their own head angular speed when a visual cue is present. It's pretty compelling that both the coding of head motion and the mouse's estimates of their motion speed both significantly improve when visual cues are available.
Researchers have developed a new technology based on nanoparticles to kill dangerous bacteria that hide inside human cells.
Burkholderia is a genus of bacterium that causes a deadly disease called melioidosis. This disease kills tens of thousands of people each year, particularly in southeast Asia. Antibiotics administered orally or intravenously often don't work very well against it as the bacteria hide away and grow in white blood cells called macrophages.
New research has shown that tiny capsules called polymersomes—which are about 1000th the diameter of a human hair—could be used to carry bug-killing antibiotics right to the site where the bacteria grow inside the cells. Their findings have been published in the journal ACS Nano.
Macrophages are cells of the immune system that have evolved to take up particles from the blood which is crucial to their role in preventing infection, but it also means that they can be exploited by some bacteria which infect and grow inside them.
In this study, the research team added polymersomes to macrophages which were infected with bacteria. Their results showed that the polymersomes were readily taken up by the macrophages and associated with the bacteria inside the cells. This means they could be an effective way to get a high concentration of antibiotics to the site of infection. The team hope this could eventually lead to patients being treated by injection or inhalation of antibiotic-laden capsules, saving many lives each year.
Eleanor Porges et al, Antibiotic-Loaded Polymersomes for Clearance of Intracellular Burkholderia thailandensis, ACS Nano (2021). DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c05309
Several marine organisms, such as mussels, secrete adhesive proteins that allow them to stick to different surfaces under sea water. This attractive underwater adhesion property has inspired decades of research to create biomimetic glues for underwater repair or biological tissue repair. However, existing glues often do not have the desirable adhesion, are hard to use underwater, or are not biocompatible for medical applications. Now, there is a solution from synthetic biology.
Researchers have developed a method that uses engineered microbes to produce the necessary ingredients for a biocompatible adhesive hydrogel that is as strong as spider silk and as adhesive as mussel foot protein (Mfp), which means it can stick to a myriad of surfaces underwater.
The team integrated the silk-amyloid protein with Mfp and, using a synthetic biology approach, synthesized a tri-hybrid protein that has the benefits of both the strong adhesion of Mfp and the high strength of spider silk. Using the tri-hybrid protein, they prepared adhesive hydrogels.
Because the protein-based adhesive can be biocompatible and biodegradable, the lab is particularly excited about its potential applications in tissue repair. This protein, they write in the paper, is particularly attractive for tendon-bone repair, which suffers from a high failure rate from current suture-based strategies.
Eugene Kim et al, A Biosynthetic Hybrid Spidroin-Amyloid-Mussel Foot Protein for Underwater Adhesion on Diverse Surfaces, ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (2021). DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c14182
Does batting second in T20 world cup cricket offer a crucial advantage? A statistics professor explains
2021 ICC Men’s T20 World Cup, the tournament’s results: Of the 45 matches played at the tournament, 29 (around 64%) were won by the team batting second. Put another way, teams batting second won almost twice as many matches as teams batting first.
Some critics have gone as far as to suggest teams can “win on a coin toss” when deciding which side will bat first.
There are a range of suggested advantages to batting second, particularly in shorter forms of cricket. Perhaps chief among them is knowing exactly what score will win the game, and being able to plan the innings accordingly. As the afternoon or evening progresses, dew can also form on the ground, making it harder for bowlers to grip the ball and for fielders to retrieve it, and easier for batters to hit balls that “skid onto the bat” rather than changing direction.
But what do the stats actually say? Does the coin toss really confer a crucial advantage?
The first question to ask is whether the pattern of results seen during the world cup could have arisen purely by chance. We do this by using statistical tests to calculate the “p-value”, which tells us the probability of obtaining 29 or more “batting second” wins out of 45 matches if the true winning chance were 50-50.
In this case, we arrive at a “p-value” of around 0.04, or 4%. This probability is reasonably small, suggesting there is indeed some evidence that batting second was beneficial at this world cup, and that the pattern of results may not have arisen by chance.
But given our data set contains only 45 matches, our test does not have much statistical power, which means this evidence is far from overwhelming.
In other words, there is a non-negligible probability (4%) that this pattern of results arose by chance, and that batting second doesn’t confer a crucial advantage after all.
analysis found that the timing of the match did not statistically influence the winning probability of the team batting second. In other words, the advantage of batting first or second did not depend on whether the match was staged during the afternoon or the evening.
That leaves two variables that might conceivably influence the situation: the venue hosting the match, and whether the team batting second has a higher or lower ranking than its opponent. That gives eight possible combinations (four venues times two possibilities for batting order) for which the statistical model can generate results.
Because there is just a handful of matches in each category, we can strengthen our statistical analysis using a concept called the “95% confidence interval”. Rather than generating only a single probability estimate, we can also calculate an upper and lower limit to our estimate, between which we can be 95% confident that the true probability is found.
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
How bacteria can clean up oil spills too
Bacteria are often painted as our adversaries, but when it comes to oil spills, toxic chemicals, and radioactive waste, they could be what save us from ourselves.
Nov 7, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Dr. Kamal Ranadive’s 104th BirthdayToday’s (google's) Doodle celebrates Indian cell biologist Dr. Kamal Ranadive, who is best known for her groundbreaking cancer research and devotion to creating a more equitable society through science and education.
Nov 8, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Why Arthritis Keeps Flaring Up in The Same Joints
According to new research conducted on mice, this could be because our immune system keeps a record of these past afflictions, creating a personalized disease pattern in each individual. Understanding more about how and why this happens could open up new opportunities for treating the disorder.
This latest study zooms in on the T cells in mice's bodies, white blood cells that are key to the immune system. In particular, the T cells in the synovium – the tissue lining the inside of the capsule around each joint – appear to hold a memory of previous RA problems.
Overwhelmingly, flares occur in a previously involved joint. The study shows that these T cells anchor themselves in the joints and stick around indefinitely after the flare is over, waiting for another trigger. If you delete these cells, arthritis flares stop.
This was demonstrated through two mouse models using chemical triggers to cause joint inflammation and one mouse model using a genetic trigger to generate the same effect: The researchers removed a protein that blocked the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1.
These triggers caused T cells to rally other cells to the immunity cause, leading to arthritis flare-ups in specific joints in the mice. When these T cells were taken out, additional inflammation was prevented. These T cells don't move between joints and take up "long-term residency" where they are, the researchers say, ready to be reactivated again.
The approach taken here was actually inspired by skin studies. T cells with a form of memory are known to reside in the skin, leading to repeating patterns in skin problems such as psoriasis. It also happens with reactions to nickel in jewelry or wristwatches.
The research team thinks that other types of autoimmune arthritis could work in the same way, which could lead to better treatments and approaches to these issues. The next step is to confirm that the same process happens in humans and find out ways to target it.
https://www.cell.com/cell-reports/fulltext/S2211-1247(21)01372-3
https://www.sciencealert.com/immune-system-memory-might-explain-why...
Nov 8, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Nov 8, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Why teapots always drip
The "teapot effect" has been threatening spotless white tablecloths for ages: if a liquid is poured out of a teapot too slowly, then the flow of liquid sometimes does not detach itself from the teapot, finding its way into the cup, but dribbles down at the outside of the teapot.
This phenomenon has been studied scientifically for decades—now a research team has succeeded in describing the "teapot effect" completely and in detail with an elaborate theoretical analysis and numerous experiments: An interplay of different forces keeps a tiny amount of liquid directly at the edge, and this is sufficient to redirect the flow of liquid under certain conditions.
The "teapot effect" was first described by Markus Reiner in 1956.
So rheology is the science of flow behavior. Again and again, scientists have tried to explain this effect precisely. Although this is a very common and seemingly simple effect, it is remarkably difficult to explain it exactly within the framework of fluid mechanics.
The sharp edge on the underside of the teapot beak plays the most important role: a drop forms, the area directly below the edge always remains wet. The size of this drop depends on the speed at which the liquid flows out of the teapot. If the speed is lower than a critical threshold, this drop can direct the entire flow around the edge and dribbles down on the outside wall of the teapot.
Researchers have now succeeded for the first time in providing a complete theoretical explanation of why this drop forms and why the underside of the edge always remains wetted.
The mathematics behind it is complicated—it is an interplay of inertia, viscous and capillary forces. The inertial force ensures that the fluid tends to maintain its original direction, while the capillary forces slow the fluid down right at the beak. The interaction of these forces is the basis of the teapot effect. However, the capillary forces ensure that the effect only starts at a very specific contact angle between the wall and the liquid surface. The smaller this angle is or the more hydrophilic (i.e. wettable) the material of the teapot is, the more the detachment of the liquid from the teapot is slowed down.
Interestingly, the strength of gravity in relation to the other forces that occur does not play a decisive role. Gravity merely determines the direction in which the jet is directed, but its strength is not decisive for the teapot effect. The teapot effect would therefore also be observed when drinking tea on a moon base, but not on a space station with no gravity at all.
B. Scheichl et al, Developed liquid film passing a smoothed and wedge-shaped trailing edge: small-scale analysis and the 'teapot effect' at large Reynolds numbers, Journal of Fluid Mechanics (2021). DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2021.612
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-teapots.html?utm_source=nwletter&...
Nov 9, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
We don’t ‘believe in’ Newton’s laws. We trust them and accepted them because there is genuine evidence that they work.
Newton's laws of motion are three laws of classical mechanics that describe the relationship between the motion of an object and the forces acting on it. These laws can be paraphrased as follows (1):
Law 1. A body continues in its state of rest, or in uniform motion in a straight line, unless acted upon by a force.
Law 2. A body acted upon by a force moves in such a manner that the time rate of change of momentum equals the force.
Law 3. If two bodies exert forces on each other, these forces are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction.
Newton's laws were verified by experiment and observation for over 200 years, and they are excellent approximations at the scales and speeds of everyday life.
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton%27s_laws_of_motion
Nov 10, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
How are epilepsy and autism linked?
Epilepsy and autism spectrum disorders, or ASD, show a remarkable degree of comorbidity and may share pathological mechanisms. Questions that have bogged down scientists about these disorders include: Does autism lead to an increase in epilepsy? Or does epilepsy alter the brain circuit, which then leads to autism?
One hypothesis is that during brain development, inhibitory neurons, which regulate brain rhythms, develop in an abnormal manner. If this is true, then how the brain circuit gets set up is abnormal, which may lead to both autism and epilepsy.
unlike excitatory neurons that lead to a forward propagation of information, inhibitory neurons work like a brake by suppressing and sculpting the activity of downstream neurons.
The researchers generated mice with a global mutation in all cells that prevented the inhibitory neurons from migrating to their normal location in mature brain circuits. Not surprisingly, they found a reduction in inhibitory currents in the hippocampus, a region of the brain known for memory function. Notably, the mutant mice showed behavioral traits associated with ASD and were more prone to seizures.
Results of the study suggest that a common underlying defect in circuit formation could contribute to both ASD and epilepsy.
Carol Eisenberg et al, Reduced hippocampal inhibition and enhanced autism-epilepsy comorbidity in mice lacking neuropilin 2, Translational Psychiatry (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41398-021-01655-6
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-11-epilepsy-autism-linked.html?...
Nov 10, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Modified silk cloth keeps skin cooler than cotton
A team of researchers has developed a modified textile that can keep skin cooler than materials made of cotton. In their paper published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, the group describes their approach to developing garments that are cooler when worn in outdoor conditions.
The researchers noted that silk does a good job of reflecting sunlight in the mid-infrared range, which suggests it could be suitable as a cooling garment material. But because it is made by spiders, it contains a protein component that tends to absorb ultraviolet radiation, making the material and its wearer grow hotter under direct sunlight.
To make the silk material UV reflective, the researchers dipped a standard piece of silk fabric into a liquid solution containing highly refractive inorganic oxide nanoparticles. These adhered to the silk fabric, allowing it to become evenly saturated throughout the material. They allowed the fabric to dry and then tested it to see if the addition of the nanoparticles made the material more UV reflective. They found that under peak sunlight conditions, the temperature under the material was approximately 3.5 degrees Celsius cooler than the ambient air temperature. Next, they placed the material on a patch of simulated skin and found the skin temperature was approximately 8 degrees Celsius cooler than the same type of simulated skin without the material covering. They also found that it kept the artificial skin approximately 12.5 degrees Celsius cooler than standard cotton material. Further testing showed that the material was able to reflect approximately 95% of sunlight, preventing it from passing through to the skin underneath.
Bin Zhu et al, Subambient daytime radiative cooling textile based on nanoprocessed silk, Nature Nanotechnology (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41565-021-00987-0
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-silk-skin-cooler-cotton.html?utm_sour...
Nov 10, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
White-tailed deer found to be huge reservoir of coronavirus infection
New research from the US has shown that white-tailed deer are being infected with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19 in humans. Antibodies were found in 40% of deer that were tested from January to March 2021 across Michigan, Pennsylvania, Illinois and New York state. A second unpublished study has detected the virus in 80% of deer sampled in Iowa between November 2020 and January 2021.
Such high levels of infection led the researchers to conclude that deer are actively transmitting the virus to one another. The scientists also identified different SARS-CoV-2 variants, suggesting there have been many human-to-deer infections.
The large numbers of white-tailed deer in North America and the fact that they often live close to people provide several opportunities for the disease to move between the two species. This can include wildlife management operations, field research, recreation, tourism and hunting. In fact, hunters are likely to be one of the most obvious sources of potential reinfection as they regularly handle dead animals. It has also been suggested that water sources contaminated with SARS-CoV-2 might provide a pathway for transmission, although this has yet to be proved.
Human-to-deer and deer-to-deer transmission are believed to be driving the rapid spread of the disease within white-tailed deer populations across the US. This is particularly apparent during the early months of 2021 when COVID infections were spiking in the human population. Previous studies have shown that SARS-CoV-2 can be passed from humans to domestic and captive animals including cats, dogs, zoo animals and, most notably, farmed mink. But, until now, the disease had not been shown to spread in wildlife species.
There is the possibility that viral mutation in a reservoir host, such as white-tailed deer, could lead to new variants of the disease. These variants may lead to greater infection rates, increased virulence (severity of symptoms) and prove more effective at evading the human immune system. Likewise, any reinfection from wildlife reservoirs could also complicate our long-term efforts to fight and suppress the disease.
https://www.pnas.org/content/118/47/e2114828118
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.10.31.466677v1
https://theconversation.com/white-tailed-deer-found-to-be-huge-rese...
Nov 10, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Humans are guilty of breaking an oceanic law of nature: study
A new international study has examined the distribution of biomass across all life in the oceans, from bacteria to whales. Their quantification of human impact reveals a fundamental alteration to one of life's largest scale patterns.
Scientists have used advances in ocean observation and large meta-analyses to show that human impacts have already had major consequences for the larger oceanic species, and have dramatically changed one of life's largest scale patterns—a pattern encompassing the entire ocean's biodiversity, from bacteria to whales.
Early samples of marine plankton biomass from 50 years ago led researchers to hypothesize that roughly equal amounts of biomass occur at all sizes. For example, although bacteria are 23 orders of magnitude smaller than a blue whale, they are also 23 orders of magnitude more abundant. This size-spectrum hypothesis has since remained unchallenged, even though it was never verified globally from bacteria to whales. The authors of the study, published in the journal Science Advances, sought to test this hypothesis on a global scale for the first time. They used historical reconstructions and marine ecosystem models to estimate biomass before industrial scale fishing got underway (pre-1850) and compared this data to the present-day.
One of the biggest challenges to comparing organisms spanning bacteria to whales is the enormous differences in scale.
The ratio of their masses is equivalent to that between a human being and the entire Earth. Researchers estimated organisms at the small end of the scale from more than 200,000 water samples collected globally, but larger marine life required completely different methods.
Their approach focused on 12 major groups of aquatic life over roughly 33,000 grid points of the ocean. Evaluating the pre-industrial ocean conditions (pre-1850) largely confirmed the original hypothesis: There is a remarkably constant biomass across size classes.
Researchers were amazed to see that each order of magnitude size class contains approximately 1 gigaton of biomass globally.
While bacteria are over-represented in the cold, dark regions of the ocean, the largest whales are relatively rare, thus highlighting exceptions from the original hypothesis.
In contrast with an even biomass spectrum in the pre-1850 ocean, an investigation of the spectrum at present revealed human impacts on ocean biomass through a new lens. While fishing and whaling only account for less than 3 percent of human food consumption, their effect on the biomass spectrum is devastating: large fish and marine mammals such as dolphins have experienced a biomass loss of 2 Gt (60% reduction), with the largest whales suffering an unsettling almost 90% decimation. The authors estimate that these losses already outpace potentialbiomass losses even under extreme climate change scenarios.
Humans have impacted the ocean in a more dramatic fashion than merely capturing fish. It seems that we have broken the size spectrum—one of the largest power law distributions known in nature. These results provide a new quantitative perspective on the extent to which anthropogenic activities have altered life at the global scale.
Ian A. Hatton et al, The global ocean size spectrum from bacteria to whales, Science Advances (2021). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abh3732
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-humans-guilty-oceanic-law-nature.html
Nov 11, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Nuclear radiation used to transmit digital data wirelessly
Engineers have successfully transferred digitally encoded information wirelessly using nuclear radiation instead of conventional technology.
Radio waves and mobile phone signals relies on electromagnetic radiation for communication but in a new development, engineers from Lancaster University in the UK, working with the Jožef Stefan Institute in Slovenia, transferred digitally encoded information using "fast neutrons" instead.
The researchers measured the spontaneous emission of fast neutrons from californium-252, a radioactive isotope produced in nuclear reactors.
Modulated emissions were measured using a detector and recorded on a laptop.
Several examples of information, i.e., a word, the alphabet and a random number selected blindly, were encoded serially into the modulation of the neutron field and the output decoded on a laptop which recovered the encoded information on screen.
A double-blind test was performed in which a number derived from a random number generator was encoded without prior knowledge of those uploading it, and then transmitted and decoded.
All transmission tests attempted proved to be 100% successful.
Malcolm J. Joyce et al, Wireless information transfer with fast neutrons, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment (2021). DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2021.165946
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-nuclear-transmit-digital-wirelessly.html
Nov 11, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Bioengineers find new way heart valves grow – and go wrong
Nov 11, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
We're Doing Mindfulness Wrong, Psychologists Say
What does mindfulness mean to you? Is it about being aware of what comes your way without distraction? Or is it engaging with life's challenges without judgement, and responding as required?
A new meta-analysis of almost 150 studies has found that most of us understand that mindfulness is about both being aware and engaging with whatever comes our way. Unfortunately, we're much worse at putting this 'engaging' part into action.
Scientific understanding of mindfulness goes beyond mere stress-relief and requires a willingness to engage with stressors. It is, in fact, the engagement with stressors that ultimately results in stress relief. More specifically, mindfulness includes two main dimensions: awareness and acceptance.
Mindfulness derives from Buddhist traditions, and has become used in Western settings since the 1970s as part of psychiatry and psychology. It has been shown to help reduce depression, stress, anxiety, and even drug addiction, and is regularly recommended as a coping mechanism as part of therapy.
In terms of regular people's understanding of mindfulness, we're really good at the 'awareness' part, the researchers say – where we take stock of what's around us, and any potential issues coming our way.
But the team found that we then tend to use mindfulness as a passive endorsement of the experience: the mindfulness equivalent of a shrug emoji.
What we should do to get the full benefits of mindfulness is engage with our experiences, finding solutions and responses to our environment – something that the researchers found that we're aware of, but we just don't do.
"These modern applications of mindfulness have recently faced substantial criticism. Scholars suggest that popular definitions cast mindfulness as a 'quick fix' for suffering rather than a longitudinal practice of re-orienting, re-framing, and engaging with daily experience," the team writes in their paper.
Part 1
Nov 11, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
The team looked at 145 datasets, in total covering 41,966 participants who did the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire. The five facets are observing, describing, acting with awareness, non-judging inner experience and non-reactivity to inner experience.
What the team found was that there was little 'convergence' across these facets across participants in non-clinical settings. Put simply, we're not embracing the whole package.
Researchers found that people seem to conceptually understand that mindfulness involves engagement, the general public is not walking the talk. Our results suggest that laypeople may understand what awareness is, but the next step of acceptance may not be well understood – limiting potential for engaging with problems.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S027273582100...
Part 2
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Nov 11, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Protein-based COVID vaccines
Some people can’t get current COVID-19 vaccines for health reasons, but protein-based vaccines offer hope that they might soon be immunized. To elicit a protective immune response, these shots deliver proteins, along with immunity-stimulating adjuvants, directly to a person’s cells, rather than sending in a fragment of genetic code that the cells must read to synthesize the proteins themselves. After months of quality-control setbacks and manufacturing delays, the protein-based jab from US biotechnology firm Novavax has just received its first emergency-use authorization, in Indonesia. Meanwhile, Clover Biopharmaceuticals, based in China, and Biological E in India are on track to file for authorization in various countries in the coming weeks and months.
Nov 11, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Nov 11, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Giant Study Identifies The Best Time to Fall Asleep to Lower Risk of Heart Problems
While the link between sleep and a healthy heart is well established, researchers are still sussing out the details. A new study suggests there might even be an optimal time, within our 24-hour body clock, for falling asleep.
Of course, the reasons for not obtaining the right sleep, whether it's the best amount or right timing are not always within our control. So anyone struggling with their sleep should seek medical advice and focus on whatever they need to do that works for them – as dictating a specific bedtime may be counterproductive for some.
But for the rest of us it may be helpful to know that falling asleep between 10-11 pm seems to hit the sweet spot for a healthy cardiovascular system.
The body has a 24-hour internal clock, called circadian rhythm, that helps regulate physical and mental functioning. While we cannot conclude causation from our study, the results suggest that early or late bedtimes may be more likely to disrupt the body clock, with adverse consequences for cardiovascular health.
The team found falling asleep after midnight or before 10 pm both was associated with around a 25 percent increase in risk of cardiovascular disease, compared to falling asleep between 10-11 pm. This increase in risk dropped to 12 percent for those who fell asleep between 11-12 pm.
"The riskiest time was after midnight, potentially because it may reduce the likelihood of seeing morning light, which resets the body clock.
This trend remained when taking into account age, gender, sleep duration, being an early bird or night owl, smoking status, weight, diabetes, blood pressure, cholesterol level, and socioeconomic status. It was also more pronounced for women, but the researchers aren't yet sure why.
https://academic.oup.com/ehjdh/advance-article/doi/10.1093/ehjdh/zt...
https://www.sciencealert.com/huge-accelerometer-study-suggests-the-...
Nov 11, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Sustainable, biodegradable, vegan glitter
Glitter is a bane of modern living. But beyond its general annoyance factor, it's also made of toxic and unsustainable materials, and contributes to plastic pollution.
Now, researchers from the University of Cambridge have found a way to make sustainable, non-toxic, vegan, and biodegradable glitter from cellulose—the main building block of cell walls in plants, fruits and vegetables—and that's just as sparkly as the original.
The glitter is made from cellulose nanocrystals, which can bend light in such a way to create vivid colors through a process called structural color. The same phenomenon produces some of the brightest colors in nature—such as those of butterfly wings and peacock feathers—and results in hues which do not fade, even after a century.
Using self-assembly techniques which allow the cellulose to produce intensely-colored films, the researchers say their materials could be used to replace the plastic glitter particles and tiny mineral effect pigments which are widely used in cosmetics.
The films of cellulose nanocrystals prepared by the team can be made at scale using roll-to-roll processes like those used to make paper from wood pulp, and this is the first time these materials have been fabricated at industrial scale. The results are reported in the journal Nature Materials.
Silvia Vignolini, Large-scale fabrication of structurally coloured cellulose nanocrystal films and effect pigments, Nature Materials (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-021-01135-8. www.nature.com/articles/s41563-021-01135-8
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-sustainable-biodegradable-vegan-glitt...
Nov 12, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
'Dancing molecules' successfully repair severe spinal cord injuries in mice
Researchers have developed a new injectable therapy that harnesses "dancing molecules" to reverse paralysis and repair tissue after severe spinal cord injuries.
In a new study, researchers administered a single injection to tissues surrounding the spinal cords of paralyzed mice. Just four weeks later, the animals regained the ability to walk.
The research will be published in the Nov. 12 issue of the journal Science.
By sending bioactive signals to trigger cells to repair and regenerate, the breakthrough therapy dramatically improved severely injured spinal cords in five key ways: (1) The severed extensions of neurons, called axons, regenerated; (2) scar tissue, which can create a physical barrier to regeneration and repair, significantly diminished; (3) myelin, the insulating layer of axons that is important in transmitting electrical signals efficiently, reformed around cells; (4) functional blood vessels formed to deliver nutrients to cells at the injury site; and (5) more motor neurons survived.
After the therapy performs its function, the materials biodegrade into nutrients for the cells within 12 weeks and then completely disappear from the body without noticeable side effects. This is the first study in which researchers controlled the collective motion of molecules through changes in chemical structure to increase a therapeutic's efficacy.
The secret behind Stupp's new breakthrough therapeutic is tuning the motion of molecules, so they can find and properly engage constantly moving cellular receptors. Injected as a liquid, the therapy immediately gels into a complex network of nanofibers that mimic the extracellular matrix of the spinal cord. By matching the matrix's structure, mimicking the motion of biological molecules and incorporating signals for receptors, the synthetic materials are able to communicate with cells.
Part 1
Nov 12, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Once connected to the receptors, the moving molecules trigger two cascading signals, both of which are critical to spinal cord repair. One signal prompts the long tails of neurons in the spinal cord, called axons, to regenerate. Similar to electrical cables, axons send signals between the brain and the rest of the body. Severing or damaging axons can result in the loss of feeling in the body or even paralysis. Repairing axons, on the other hand, increases communication between the body and brain.
The second signal helps neurons survive after injury because it causes other cell types to proliferate, promoting the regrowth of lost blood vessels that feed neurons and critical cells for tissue repair. The therapy also induces myelin to rebuild around axons and reduces glial scarring, which acts as a physical barrier that prevents the spinal cord from healing.
The signals used in the study mimic the natural proteins that are needed to induce the desired biological responses. While the new therapy could be used to prevent paralysis after major trauma (automobile accidents, falls, sports accidents and gunshot wounds) as well as from diseases, researchers think the underlying discovery—that "supramolecular motion" is a key factor in bioactivity—can be applied to other therapies and targets.
Zaida Alvarez et al, Bioactive Scaffolds with Enhanced Supramolecular Motion Promote Recovery from Spinal Cord Injury, Science (2021). DOI: 10.1126/science.abh3602. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abh3602
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-11-molecules-successfully-sever...
Part 2
Nov 12, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Scientists appeal for immediate climate action at COP26
More than 200 scientists told the COP26 summit Thursday to take immediate action to halt global warming, warning in an open letter that some climate change impacts were "irreversible" for generations.
The central task of the Glasgow meeting is to implement the Paris Agreement, with its goal of limiting temperature rise to between 1.5 and 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.
But as negotiations enter their final days, commitments made so far could still lead to "catastrophic" warming of as much as 2.7C by 2100, according to the UN.
"We, climate scientists, stress that immediate, strong, rapid, sustained and large-scale actions are necessary," to keep warming within the Paris target, said the letter, signed by researchers across the world.
In August, a bombshell "code red" report from the world's top climate science body, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), warned that Earth's average temperature will hit the 1.5C threshold around 2030, a decade earlier than projected only three years ago.
To keep from overshooting that temperature target the IPCC says emissions must fall 45 percent this decade.
Thursday's open letter, signed by some of the IPCC's report authors, calls on delegates in Glasgow to "fully acknowledge" the scientific evidence they have compiled of the severe threats posed by climate change.
"Cumulative greenhouse gas emissions to date already commit our planet to key changes of the climate system affecting human society and marine and terrestrial ecosystems, some of which are irreversible for generations to come," said the letter.
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-scientists-appeal-climate-action-cop2...
Nov 12, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Second instance of canine coronavirus found in a person
A University of Florida research team is helping to build the case that coronaviruses move between animals and people at a more frequent rate than previously understood. Earlier this year, the team reported the first known instance of a coronavirus common in pigs to have "spilled over" into people. Spillovers refer to events where a virus that is adapted to a certain kind of hostsay, a dog, or pigacquires features that allow it to infect an entirely different species of host, such as a person. In their newest work, the team retrospectively uncovered an instance where a coronavirus known from dogs, called a canine coronavirus, infected at least one person visiting Haiti in early 2017. The infected person had a mild illness with fever and fatigue. The new work published in Clinical Infectious Diseases on Oct. 28,2021. In an unusual twist, the virus was determined to closely match a canine coronavirus reported earlier in 2021.
Nov 12, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Study Finds Fish Rubbing Up Against Their Predators — Sharks. Researchers suggest this behaviour plays a greater ecological role than previously known
Nov 12, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
There's a Strange Difference Between Human Brains And Those of Other Mammals
When it comes to the world of mammals, humans tend to stand out a fair bit.
While many animals share some aspects of our intelligence, they don't take it to the same level we have. But pinning down why we're more cognitively advanced on a neurological level has been tricky; to date, studies have found no significant differences between the brains of mammals. Now, we finally have a lead.
A team of researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has found that, compared to other mammals, human brains have a much lower number of the neuronal channels that allow the flow of ions such as calcium, potassium, and sodium.
This flow produces the electrical impulses that allow neurons to communicate with each other; having fewer of them could mean that the human brain can operate more efficiently, diverting resources to more complex cognitive functions.
One of their findings concerned dendrites, the branching structures at the tips of nerve cells through which the brain's electrical impulses are received via ion channels. From here, the dendrite generates what we call an action potential, which transfers the signal onwards.
Part 1
Nov 12, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
When comparing the brains of the two species, the researchers found that the human dendrites had a marked lower density of these ion channels compared to rat dendrites. This was worth investigating further.
The new research has been expanded to include 10 species: shrew, mouse, gerbil, rat, ferret, guinea pig, rabbit, marmoset, macaque and, of course, human, using samples of tissue excised from epilepsy patients during brain surgery.
An analysis of the physical structure of these brains revealed that ion channel density increases with neuron size, with one notable exception: the human brain.
This, the researchers concluded, was to maintain ion channel density across a range of brain sizes; so, although the shrew had a higher number of neurons than the rabbit or the macaque in a given volume of brain, the density of ion channels in that volume was consistent.
"This building plan is consistent across nine different mammalian species. What it looks like the cortex is trying to do is keep the numbers of ion channels per unit volume the same across all the species. This means that for a given volume of cortex, the energetic cost is the same, at least for ion channels.
The exceptionally low ion channel density in the human brain was glaring, when compared with all the other brains.
All the comparison animals were significantly smaller than humans, of course, so it may be worth testing the samples of even larger animals. However, the macaque is often used in research as a model for the human brain.
The researchers suspect an evolutionary trade-off is possible for humans – this is when a biological system loses or diminishes a trait for an optimization elsewhere.
For example, it takes energy to pump ions through dendrites. By minimizing ion channel density, the human brain may have been able to deploy the energy savings elsewhere – perhaps in more complex synaptic connections, or more rapid action potentials.
"If the brain can save energy by reducing the density of ion channels, it can spend that energy on other neuronal or circuit processes
Part 2
Nov 12, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Researchers think that humans have evolved out of this building plan that was previously restricting the size of cortex, and they figured out a way to become more energetically efficient, so you spend less ATP [energy molecules] per volume compared to other species."
This finding reveals, the researchers said, an intriguing avenue for further investigation. In future research, the team hopes to explore the evolutionary pressures that might have led to this difference, and isolate where, exactly, that extra brain energy is going.
The research has been published in Nature.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-04072-3
https://www.sciencealert.com/we-ve-just-found-a-fascinating-differe...
**
Part 3
Nov 12, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
The Matilda effect is a bias against acknowledging the achievements of those women scientists whose work is attributed to their male colleagues. This effect was first described by suffragist and abolitionist Matilda Joslyn Gage (1826–98) in her essay, "Woman as Inventor" (first published as a tract in 1870 and in the North American Review in 1883). The term "Matilda effect" was coined in 1993 by science historian Margaret W. Rossiter. Rossiter provides several examples of this effect. Trotula (Trota of Salerno), a 12th-century Italian woman physician, wrote books which, after her death, were attributed to male authors. Nineteenth- and twentieth-century cases illustrating the Matilda effect include those of Nettie Stevens, Lise Meitner, Marietta Blau, Rosalind Franklin, and Jocelyn Bell Burnell. The Matilda effect was compared to the Matthew effect, whereby an eminent scientist often gets more credit than a comparatively unknown researcher, even if their work is shared or similar.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matilda_effect
Nov 12, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Introduced birds are not replacing roles of human-caused extinct species: study
Human-caused bird extinctions are driving losses of functional diversity on islands worldwide, and the gaps they leave behind are not being filled by introduced (alien) species, finds a new study.
The study, published in Science Advances, shows how human impacts such as habitat destruction and climate change are impoverishing ecosystems, even on islands where alien birds actually outnumber the species that have gone extinct.
Humans have drastically changed bird communities, not only by driving animals to extinction but also by introducing species into new habitats across the globe. There has been some debate as to whether introduced species might replace the roles of the extinct species, thus maintaining functional diversity within the ecosystem; here, researchers found that is unfortunately not the case.
Valuable functions that may be lost with bird extinctions can include pollination and seed dispersal, which can have cascading harmful effects on other species.
Some groups of birds have been particularly successful at establishing outside their natural areas—for example, many species of parrot and starling. Because of this, islands are becoming more homogeneous as the same kind of birds are established everywhere.
These new findings add to evidence that conservation efforts should be focused on preserving functionally distinct threatened species, to stem the tide of harmful losses to biodiversity that are driven by human actions. Huge numbers of species are being driven to extinction by human-driven effects such as habitat loss and climate change, so it is vital that we act now to reduce our negative impact on global biodiversity.
Ferran Sayol, Loss of functional diversity through anthropogenic extinctions of island birds is not offset by biotic invasions, Science Advances (2021). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abj5790. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.abj5790
part 1
Nov 13, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
For this study, the researchers compiled an exhaustive list of all bird species that have been present in nine different archipelagos* before and after human-caused extinctions occurred. This covered 1,302 bird species, including 265 globally or locally extinct, and 355 established introductions from 143 separate species. In addition, the scientists visited different museum collections, including the Natural History Museum, to measure several morphological traits in skin or skeleton specimens. With this data, the researchers were able to quantify the trait diversity before and after bird extinctions, and identify the ecological niches extinct birds once filled.
The research team found that before human arrival, island bird communities were more morphologically diverse than they are today. Their findings show how human-driven extinctions have disproportionally affected some types of birds (for example, larger birds and flightless birds are more likely to go extinct), leading to the loss of certain ecological roles.
The researchers also found that different archipelagos are becoming more and more similar in terms of trait diversity as native birds go extinct and the same kind of alien species are being newly established in many places.
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-birds-roles-human-caused-extinct-spec...
Part 2
Nov 13, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Researchers discover link between dietary fat and the spread of cancer
A new study uncovers how palmitic acid alters the cancer genome, increasing the likelihood the cancer will spread. Researchers have started developing therapies that interrupt this process and say a clinical trial could start in the next couple of years.
Metastasis—or the spread—of cancer remains the main cause of death in cancer patients and the vast majority of people with metastatic cancer can only be treated, but not cured. Fatty acids are the building blocks of fat in our body and the food we eat. Metastasis is promoted by fatty acids in our diet, but it has been unclear how this works and whether all fatty acids contribute to metastasis.
Newly published findings reveal that one such fatty acid commonly found in palm oil, called palmitic acid, promotes metastasis in oral carcinomas and melanoma skin cancer in mice. Other fatty acids called oleic acid and linoleic acid—omega-9 and omega-6 fats found in foods such as olive oil and flaxseeds—did not show the same effect. Neither of the fatty acids tested increased the risk of developing cancer in the first place.
The research found that when palmitic acid was supplemented into the diet of mice, it not only contributed to metastasis, but also exerts long-term effects on the genome. Cancer cells that had only been exposed to palmitic acid in the diet for a short period of time remained highly metastatic even when the palmitic acid had been removed from the diet.
The researchers discovered that this "memory" is caused by epigenetic changes—changes to how our genes function. The epigenetic changes alter the function of metastatic cancer cells and allow them to form a neural network around the tumor to communicate with cells in their immediate environment and to spread more easily. By understanding the nature of this communication, the researchers uncovered a way to block it and are now in the process of planning a clinical trial to stop metastasis in different types of cancer.
Salvador Benitah, Dietary palmitic acid promotes a prometastatic memory via Schwann cells, Nature (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04075-0. www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-04075-0
https://researchnews.cc/news/9975/Researchers-discover-link-between...
Nov 14, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
New research helps explain the genetic basis for why we look the way we do
Which genes control the defining features that make us look as we do? And how do they make it happen?
In 1990, University of California San Diego biologist William McGinnis conducted a seminal experiment that helped scientists unravel how high-level control genes called Hox genes shape our appearance features. The "McGinnis experiment" helped pave the way for understanding the role of Hox genes in determining the uniform appearances of species, from humans to chimpanzees to flies.
McGinnis, a professor emeritus of Cell and Developmental Biology and former dean of the Division of Biological Sciences, helped discover a defining DNA region that he termed the "homeobox," a sequence within genes that directs anatomical development. Since the now-famous McGinnis experiment, evolutionary and developmental biologists have pondered how these highly influential Hox genes determine the identities of different body regions.
More than three decades later, a study published in Science Advances and led by Ankush Auradkar, a UC San Diego postdoctoral scholar mentored by coauthor McGinnis and study senior author Ethan Bier, helps answer questions about how Hox genes function.
The now-textbook McGinnis experiment tested whether the proteins produced by a human or mouse Hox gene could function in flies. Following in these footsteps, the new study leveraged modern CRISPR gene editing to investigate whether all aspects of Hox gene function, which consists of both protein coding and control regions, could be replaced in a common laboratory fruit fly (Drosophila melanogaster) with its counterpart from a rarer Hawaiian cousin (Drosophila mimica), which has a very different face.
Part 1
Nov 14, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
The gene in question, proboscipedia, would plainly reveal itself since it directs the formation of strikingly different mouth parts—smooth and spongy in D. mel but more grill-like (resembling the face of the alien in Predator science fiction films) in D. mim.
Study coauthor Emily Bulger first collected the notoriously difficult-to-breed D. mim samples from Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park, along with the only native fruit (Sapindus saponaria—Hawaiian soapberry) that the insects are known to eat, in order to establish a temporary colony in Bier's laboratory. Auradkar then collaborated with coauthor Sushil Devkota to decipher the genome sequence of the D. mim proboscipedia gene, which was nearly 44,000 bases long. The researchers then deleted the D. mel proboscipedia gene and replaced it with the D. mim version of the same.
As McGinnis had predicted, the new results revealed that the graceful facial structure of D. mel emerged as the "winner" over the rough features of D. mim. One trait of D. mim, however, did surface during the experiment: Sensory organs called maxillary palps that stick out from the face in D. mel instead ran parallel to feeding mouthparts as they do in D. mim. Auradkar used sophisticated genetic tools to determine the basis for this difference and tracked it down to a change in the pattern by which the proboscipedia gene is activated (control region changes).
The experiment's results help answer longstanding questions about whether Hox genes function as "master" regulatory genes that dictate different body parts in organisms. Or, as McGinnis proposed, whether Hox genes instead provide abstract positional codes and serve as scaffolds for downstream genes that best benefit the organism. Other than the maxillary palps, the new results demonstrated that McGinnis' scaffolding idea proved to be the case.
McGinnis says that beyond the implications for evolutionary biology, the results could help explain developmental issues rooted in fundamental human genetic processes.
"These fly studies provide a window into deep evolutionary time and inform us about the mechanisms by which body plans change during evolution," said Bier. "These insights may lead to a better of understanding of processes tied to congenital birth defects in humans. With the advent of powerful new CRISPR-based genome editing systems for human therapy on the horizon, new strategies might be formulated to mitigate some of the effects of these often debilitating conditions."
https://researchnews.cc/news/9981/New-research-helps-explain-the-ge...
part 2
**
Nov 14, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Achieving razor-sharp vision in the metaverse
Nov 14, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Researchers may have unlocked function of mysterious structure found on neurons
For 30 years, mysterious clusters of proteins found on the cell body of neurons in the hippocampus, a part of the brain, both intrigued and baffled James Trimmer.
Now, the distinguished professor of physiology and membrane biology at the UC Davis School of Medicine may finally have an answer. In a new study published in PNAS, Trimmer and his colleagues reveal these protein clusters are calcium signaling "hotspots" in the neuron that play a crucial role in activating gene transcription.
Transcription allows portions of the neuron's DNA to be "transcribed" into strands of RNA that are then used to create the proteins needed by the cell.
Structures found in many animals
Trimmer's lab studies the enigmatic clusters in mice, but they exist in invertebrates and all vertebrates—including humans. Trimmer estimates that there can be 50 to 100 of these large clusters on a single neuron.
He and his colleagues knew that the clusters are formed by a protein that passes potassium ions through membranes (a potassium channel). They also knew these clusters contain a particular type of calcium channel. Calcium channels allow calcium to enter cells, where it triggers a variety of physiological responses depending on the type of cell.
"The presence of these clusters in neurons is highly conserved," Trimmer said. Highly conserved features are relatively unchanged through evolutionary timescales, suggesting they have an important functional property in these very different types of animals.
The hippocampus, one region of the brain where the clusters are found on neurons, plays a major role in learning and memory. Researchers knew that disruption to these clusters—for example, from genetic mutations in the potassium channel—results in severe neurological disorders. But it was not clear why.
"We have known the function of other types of ion channel clusters, for example those at synapses, for a long time. However, there was no known role that these much larger structures on the cell body played in the physiology of the neuron," Trimmer said.
Nov 14, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Experiment flooded calcium channels with 'decoys'
The experiment that revealed the function of the neuronal clusters was designed by Nicholas C. Vierra, a postdoctoral researcher in Trimmer's lab and lead author for the study.
"We developed an approach that let us uncouple the calcium channel from the potassium channel clusters in neurons. A key finding was that this treatment blocked calcium-triggered gene expression. This suggests that the calcium channel-potassium channel partnership at these clusters is important for neuronal function," Vierra said.
For their experiment, the researchers essentially "tricked" the calcium channels at these clusters by flooding the neurons with decoy potassium channel fragments. When the calcium channels grabbed onto the decoys instead of the real potassium channels, they fell away from the clusters.
As a result, the process known as excitation-transcription coupling, which links changes in neuronal electrical activity to changes in gene expression, was inactivated.
"There are a lot of different calcium channels, but the particular type of calcium channel found at these clusters is necessary for converting changes in electrical activity to changes in gene expression," Trimmer said. "We found that if you interfere with the calcium-signaling proteins located at these unusual clusters, you basically eliminate excitation-transcription coupling, which is critical for learning, memory, and other forms of neuronal plasticity."
Trimmer and Vierra hope their findings will open new avenues of research.
"A lot of research has focused on calcium signaling in dendrites—the sites where neurons receive signals from other neurons. Calcium signaling in the cell body of neurons has received less attention," said Vierra. "Now we understand much more about the significance of signaling at these specific sites on the cell body of the neuron."
"We are only at the beginning of understanding the significance of this signaling, but these new results may provide information that could shape new research into its role in brain function, and perhaps eventually into the development of new classes of therapeutics," said Trimmer.
Additional authors on the study include Samantha C. O'Dwyer, Collin Matsumoto and L. Fernando Santana, Department of Physiology and Membrane Biology, UC Davis School of Medicine.
https://researchnews.cc/news/9979/Researchers-may-have-unlocked-fun...
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Nov 14, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Microbiomes: It's who you are that matters most
Every mammal hosts a hidden community of other organisms—the microbiome. Their intestines teem with complex microbial populations that are critical for nutrition, fighting disease and degrading harmful toxins. Throughout their lives, mammals are exposed to countless microbes through their food and environment, but only a small subset take up permanent residence in the host. Although scientists agree that diet, geography and evolutionary history structure the microbiome, the relative influence of each factor is a mystery. No rigorous study has investigated all three at once in wild mammal populations. Until now.
A team of University of Utah biologists analyzed the bacteria in the gut microbiome of woodrats (Neotoma species), a group of closely related herbivorous rodents abundant in the southwestern United States. The animals offered a unique opportunity to test how diet, geography and evolutionary history influence microbiome structure. The many woodrat species are morphologically similar, but populations live in a variety of habitats and have distinct diets. Woodrats are famous for eating extremely toxic plants and do so with support from specialized gut bacteria.
Woodrats are amazing—they have incredibly diverse diets. Individuals from the same species eat different foods at different locations, so it creates a natural experiment. It's hard to say what's driving their different microbiomes—is it what they're eating? Is it where they're living? Or is it who they are?
The researchers used DNA barcoding techniques to characterize the diet and gut bacteria of seven woodrat species from 25 populations at 19 locations across the southwestern U.S. The biologists then brought the rodents into captivity, fed them a diet of rabbit chow for one month and then resampled their microbiome. The results show that in both wild and captive individuals, evolutionary history was the biggest predictor of microbiome structure—more than diet and geography.
Microbiome stability and structure is governed by host phylogeny over diet and geography in woodrats (Neotoma spp.), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2021). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2108787118.
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-woodrat-microbiomes.html?utm_source=n...
Part1
Nov 16, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
In wild populations, diet and geography did influence microbiome composition and diversity.
Diet contributed to natural microbiome structure. The authors collected feces from each rodent at the time of capture to get a snapshot of their diet. Using these samples, they found that animals with more diverse diets had more diverse microbiomes, and animals that fed on similar plants also showed similarities in their microbial communities.
Geography also played a role. The authors found that individuals at the same site had more similar microbiomes, and these communities became more dissimilar as animals were sampled at more distant locations.
However, host relatedness was still the most important factor predicting the microbial makeup of these wild mammals. And these effects only increased when animals were in captivity.
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While every individual experienced a large shift, each individual's microbiome was still closer to its wild self than it would be to any other woodrat species. Researchers didn't see microbiomes merging into the same makeup; species retained distinct bacterial communities. With the differences of diet and habitat removed, they saw even more clearly the extent to which host relatedness influences microbiome structure.
The research team also found that microbiome responses to captivity were species specific, suggesting that host evolutionary history influences not only microbiome structure, but also stability.
Part 2
Nov 16, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Prions may channel RNA's messages
Prions get mostly bad press, but they may be the keys to controlling protein synthesis in cells.
Prions, proteins that can misfold and aggregate, have been implicated in many neurodegenerative diseases. Yet some prions are involved in storing long term memories. New models by scientists describe how they can regulate the translation of RNA messages into new proteins by forming organized protein synthesis factories.
Vectorial channeling as a mechanism for translational control by functional prions and condensates, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2021). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2115904118.
Nov 16, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Booster shots
Nov 16, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Where does gold come from?—New insights into element synthesis in the universe
How are chemical elements produced in our Universe? Where do heavy elements like gold and uranium come from? Using computer simulations, a research team shows that the synthesis of heavy elements is typical for certain black holes with orbiting matter accumulations, so-called accretion disks.
All heavy elements on Earth today were formed under extreme conditions in astrophysical environments: inside stars, in stellar explosions, and during the collision of neutron stars. Researchers are intrigued with the question in which of these astrophysical events the appropriate conditions for the formation of the heaviest elements, such as gold or uranium, exist. The spectacular first observation of gravitational waves and electromagnetic radiation originating from a neutron star merger in 2017 suggested that many heavy elements can be produced and released in these cosmic collisions. However, the question remains open as to when and why the material is ejected and whether there may be other scenarios in which heavy elements can be produced.
Promising candidates for heavy element production are black holes orbited by an accretion disk of dense and hot matter. Such a system is formed both after the merger of two massive neutron stars and during a so-called collapsar, the collapse and subsequent explosion of a rotating star.
Researchers systematically investigated for the first time the conversion rates of neutrons and protons for a large number of disk configurations by means of elaborate computer simulations, and we found that the disks are very rich in neutrons as long as certain conditions are met
Part 1
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Nov 16, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Promising candidates for heavy element production are black holes orbited by an accretion disk of dense and hot matter. Such a system is formed both after the merger of two massive neutron stars and during a so-called collapsar, the collapse and subsequent explosion of a rotating star. The internal composition of such accretion disks has so far not been well understood, particularly with respect to the conditions under which an excess of neutrons forms. A high number of neutrons is a basic requirement for the synthesis of heavy elements, as it enables the rapid neutron-capture process or r-process. Nearly massless neutrinos play a key role in this process, as they enable conversion between protons and neutrons.
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The decisive factor is the total mass of the disk. The more massive the disk, the more often neutrons are formed from protons through capture of electrons under emission of neutrinos, and are available for the synthesis of heavy elements by means of the r-process. However, if the mass of the disk is too high, the inverse reaction plays an increased role so that more neutrinos are recaptured by neutrons before they leave the disk. These neutrons are then converted back to protons, which hinders the r-process." As the study shows, the optimal disk mass for prolific production of heavy elements is about 0.01 to 0.1 solar masses. The result provides strong evidence that neutron star mergers producing accretion disks with these exact masses could be the point of origin for a large fraction of the heavy elements. However, whether and how frequently such accretion disks occur in collapsar systems is currently unclear.
In addition to the possible processes of mass ejection, the research group led by Dr. Andreas Bauswein is also investigating the light signals generated by the ejected matter, which will be used to infer the mass and composition of the ejected matter in future observations of colliding neutron stars. An important building block for correctly reading these light signals is accurate knowledge of the masses and other properties of the newly formed elements.
O Just et al, Neutrino absorption and other physics dependencies in neutrino-cooled black hole accretion disks, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (2021). DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab2861
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-gold-fromnew-insights-element-synthes...
Nov 16, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
New gene identified that contributes to progression to type 1 diabetes
When the pro-inflammatory pair, a receptor called CCR2 and its ligand CCL-2, get together, it increases the risk of developing type 1 diabetes, scientists report.
In this autoimmune disease that typically surfaces in childhood, the interaction of this natural lock and key recruits immune cells to the pancreas, which attack the insulin-producing islet cells, resulting in a lifelong course of insulin therapy and a lifelong increased risk of other health problems like heart and kidney disease.
The study, published in the Journal of Translational Autoimmunity, provides evidence the CCR2 gene promotes progression to type 1 as it provides new insight on how to delay disease progression.
The new study focused on 42 individuals who persistently had antibodies against the insulin-producing islet cells but never actually developed type 1, 48 who did develop type 1 and the remainder who did neither and served as the control group.
They found that blood levels of CCL-2, the ligand for CCR2, were lower in both individuals who had antibodies but not actual disease as well as those who progressed to type 1 diabetes.
They also found that both these groups have more of the receptors on their immune cells, which get recruited by the ligand to the six-inch organ in the abdomen that helps us break down the food we eat.
Conversely, less receptors mean less recruitment of immune cells, more normal levels of CCL-2 in the blood and less cell destruction.
Paul MH. Tran et al, The 3p21.31 genetic locus promotes progression to type 1 diabetes through the CCR2/CCL2 pathway, Journal of Translational Autoimmunity (2021). DOI: 10.1016/j.jtauto.2021.100127
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-11-gene-contributes-diabetes.ht...
Nov 17, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Neuroscientists illuminate how brain cells 'navigate' in the light and dark
To navigate successfully in an environment, you need to continuously track the speed and direction of your head, even in the dark. Researchers have discovered how individual and networks of cells in an area of the brain called the retrosplenial cortex encode this angular head motion in mice to enable navigation both during the day and at night.
One of the main aims of this study is to understand how the brain uses external and internal information to tell the difference between allocentric and egocentric-based motion. This paper is the first step in helping us understand whether individual cells actually have access to both self-motion and, when available, the resultant external visual motion signals.
The researchers found that the retrosplenial cortex uses vestibular signals to encode the speed and direction of the head. However, when the lights are on, the coding of head motion is significantly more accurate.
When the lights are on, visual landmarks are available to better estimate your own speed (at which your head is moving). If you can't very reliably encode your head turning speed, then you very quickly lose your sense of direction. This might explain why, particularly in novel environments, we become much worse at navigating once the lights are turned out.
part 1
Nov 17, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
To understand how the brain enables navigation with and without visual cues, the researchers recorded from neurons across all layers in the retrosplenial cortex as the animals were free to roam around a large arena. This enabled the neuroscientists to identify neurons in the brain called angular head velocity (AHV) cells, which track the speed and direction of the head.
This work showed that a single cell can see both kinds of signals: vestibular and visual. What was also critically important was the development of a behavioral task that enabled the scientists to determine that mice improve their estimation of their own head angular speed when a visual cue is present. It's pretty compelling that both the coding of head motion and the mouse's estimates of their motion speed both significantly improve when visual cues are available.
Troy W Margrie, Multi-sensory coding of angular head velocity in the retrosplenial cortex, Neuron (2021). DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.10.031. www.cell.com/neuron/fulltext/S0896-6273(21)00846-1
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-11-neuroscientists-illuminate-b...
Nov 17, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Killing bacteria with nanoparticles
Researchers have developed a new technology based on nanoparticles to kill dangerous bacteria that hide inside human cells.
Burkholderia is a genus of bacterium that causes a deadly disease called melioidosis. This disease kills tens of thousands of people each year, particularly in southeast Asia. Antibiotics administered orally or intravenously often don't work very well against it as the bacteria hide away and grow in white blood cells called macrophages.
New research has shown that tiny capsules called polymersomes—which are about 1000th the diameter of a human hair—could be used to carry bug-killing antibiotics right to the site where the bacteria grow inside the cells. Their findings have been published in the journal ACS Nano.
Macrophages are cells of the immune system that have evolved to take up particles from the blood which is crucial to their role in preventing infection, but it also means that they can be exploited by some bacteria which infect and grow inside them.
In this study, the research team added polymersomes to macrophages which were infected with bacteria. Their results showed that the polymersomes were readily taken up by the macrophages and associated with the bacteria inside the cells. This means they could be an effective way to get a high concentration of antibiotics to the site of infection. The team hope this could eventually lead to patients being treated by injection or inhalation of antibiotic-laden capsules, saving many lives each year.
Eleanor Porges et al, Antibiotic-Loaded Polymersomes for Clearance of Intracellular Burkholderia thailandensis, ACS Nano (2021). DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c05309
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-bacteria-nanoparticles.html?utm_sourc...
Nov 17, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Synthetic biology yields easy-to-use underwater adhesives
Several marine organisms, such as mussels, secrete adhesive proteins that allow them to stick to different surfaces under sea water. This attractive underwater adhesion property has inspired decades of research to create biomimetic glues for underwater repair or biological tissue repair. However, existing glues often do not have the desirable adhesion, are hard to use underwater, or are not biocompatible for medical applications. Now, there is a solution from synthetic biology.
Researchers have developed a method that uses engineered microbes to produce the necessary ingredients for a biocompatible adhesive hydrogel that is as strong as spider silk and as adhesive as mussel foot protein (Mfp), which means it can stick to a myriad of surfaces underwater.
The team integrated the silk-amyloid protein with Mfp and, using a synthetic biology approach, synthesized a tri-hybrid protein that has the benefits of both the strong adhesion of Mfp and the high strength of spider silk. Using the tri-hybrid protein, they prepared adhesive hydrogels.
Because the protein-based adhesive can be biocompatible and biodegradable, the lab is particularly excited about its potential applications in tissue repair. This protein, they write in the paper, is particularly attractive for tendon-bone repair, which suffers from a high failure rate from current suture-based strategies.
Eugene Kim et al, A Biosynthetic Hybrid Spidroin-Amyloid-Mussel Foot Protein for Underwater Adhesion on Diverse Surfaces, ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (2021). DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c14182
https://phys.org/news/2021-11-synthetic-biology-yields-easy-to-use-...
Nov 17, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
A personalized exosuit for real-world walking
Nov 17, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Does batting second in T20 world cup cricket offer a crucial advantage? A statistics professor explains
2021 ICC Men’s T20 World Cup, the tournament’s results: Of the 45 matches played at the tournament, 29 (around 64%) were won by the team batting second. Put another way, teams batting second won almost twice as many matches as teams batting first.
Some critics have gone as far as to suggest teams can “win on a coin toss” when deciding which side will bat first.
There are a range of suggested advantages to batting second, particularly in shorter forms of cricket. Perhaps chief among them is knowing exactly what score will win the game, and being able to plan the innings accordingly. As the afternoon or evening progresses, dew can also form on the ground, making it harder for bowlers to grip the ball and for fielders to retrieve it, and easier for batters to hit balls that “skid onto the bat” rather than changing direction.
But what do the stats actually say? Does the coin toss really confer a crucial advantage?
Part 1
Nov 17, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
The first question to ask is whether the pattern of results seen during the world cup could have arisen purely by chance. We do this by using statistical tests to calculate the “p-value”, which tells us the probability of obtaining 29 or more “batting second” wins out of 45 matches if the true winning chance were 50-50.
In this case, we arrive at a “p-value” of around 0.04, or 4%. This probability is reasonably small, suggesting there is indeed some evidence that batting second was beneficial at this world cup, and that the pattern of results may not have arisen by chance.
But given our data set contains only 45 matches, our test does not have much statistical power, which means this evidence is far from overwhelming.
In other words, there is a non-negligible probability (4%) that this pattern of results arose by chance, and that batting second doesn’t confer a crucial advantage after all.
part 2
Nov 17, 2021
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
analysis found that the timing of the match did not statistically influence the winning probability of the team batting second. In other words, the advantage of batting first or second did not depend on whether the match was staged during the afternoon or the evening.
That leaves two variables that might conceivably influence the situation: the venue hosting the match, and whether the team batting second has a higher or lower ranking than its opponent. That gives eight possible combinations (four venues times two possibilities for batting order) for which the statistical model can generate results.
Because there is just a handful of matches in each category, we can strengthen our statistical analysis using a concept called the “95% confidence interval”. Rather than generating only a single probability estimate, we can also calculate an upper and lower limit to our estimate, between which we can be 95% confident that the true probability is found.
Part 3
Nov 17, 2021