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Antarctic ice-sheet melting to lift sea level higher than thought, Harvard study says Posted: 30 Apr 2021 01:59 PM PDT |
Poorer communities hardest hit by toxic pollution incidents Posted: 30 Apr 2021 01:59 PM PDT |
Computer scientists discover new vulnerability affecting computers globally Posted: 30 Apr 2021 01:59 PM PDT |
Neural nets used to rethink material design Posted: 30 Apr 2021 01:58 PM PDT |
Branching worm with dividing internal organs growing in sea sponge Posted: 30 Apr 2021 01:58 PM PDT |
Piecing together the LanCL puzzle Posted: 30 Apr 2021 11:47 AM PDT |
Not just for finding planets: Exoplanet-hunter TESS telescope spots bright gamma-ray burst Posted: 30 Apr 2021 10:54 AM PDT NASA has a long tradition of unexpected discoveries, and the space program's TESS mission is no different. Astrophysicists have discovered a particularly bright gamma-ray burst using a NASA telescope designed to find exoplanets - those occurring outside our solar system - particularly those that might be able to support life. It's the first time a gamma-ray burst has been found this way. |
Wildfire smoke trends worsening for Western US Posted: 30 Apr 2021 10:54 AM PDT |
Engineering T cells to attack cancer broadly Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:04 AM PDT This study builds on decades of work showing that the protein IL-24 attacks cancer broadly, and is the first to deliver the protein using T cells. This approach is in contrast to CAR-T cells, which are built to recognize proteins on the surface of cancer cells and haven't been successful against solid tumors. Mice with prostate cancer experienced shrinkage of the original tumor as well as distant metastases following treatment with IL-24 T cells. |
New view of species interactions offers clues to preserve threatened ecosystems Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:04 AM PDT |
Move over CRISPR, the Retrons are coming Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:04 AM PDT Researchers have created a new gene editing tool called Retron Library Recombineering (RLR) that can generate up to millions of mutations simultaneously, and 'barcodes' mutant bacterial cells so that the entire pool can be screened at once. It can be used in contexts where CRISPR is toxic or not feasible, and results in better editing rates. |
Light as a fairy tale: What makes a feel-good film feel good? Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:04 AM PDT 'Feel-good films' are usually dismissed by film critics as being sentimental and without intellectual merit. But their popularity with audiences, who seek them out precisely because of their 'feel-good' qualities, tells a more favorable story. Now, for the first time, this popular movie genre has been examined scientifically. |
Important factor in the development of dendritic cells identified Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:03 AM PDT Dendritic cells are divided into Type 1 (DC1) and Type 2 (DC2) dendritic cells. Each type fulfills different functions: DC1 provide an immune response to bacteria and viruses, DC2 protect against fungal or parasitic infections. Researchers found that a particular group of proteins plays a major role in the development of Type 1 dendritic cells. This |
Milestone for next-gen acceleration experiment Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:03 AM PDT The future of particle acceleration has begun. Awake is a promising concept for a completely new method with which particles can be accelerated even over short distances. The basis for this is a plasma wave that accelerates electrons and thus brings them to high energies. A team now reports a breakthrough in this context. For the first time, they were able to precisely time the production of the proton microbunches that drive the wave in the plasma. This fulfills an important prerequisite for using the Awake technology for collision experiments. |
Hippocampal maps predict context-dependent behavior Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:03 AM PDT |
Fiber-optic ultrasonic imaging probe for future nanoscale disease diagnostics Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:03 AM PDT |
Shortage of DNA building blocks in the cell releases mitochondrial DNA Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:03 AM PDT Mitochondria are the energy suppliers of our body cells. These tiny cell components have their own genetic material, which triggers an inflammatory response when released into the interior of the cell. The reasons for the release are not yet known, but some cardiac and neurodegenerative diseases as well as the ageing process are linked to the mitochondrial genome. Researchers have investigated the reasons for the release of mitochondrial genetic material and found a direct link to cellular metabolism: when the cell's DNA building blocks are in short supply, mitochondria release their genetic material and trigger inflammation. The researchers hope to find new therapeutic approaches by influencing this metabolic pathway. |
Brazilian Amazon released more carbon than it stored in 2010s Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:03 AM PDT |
'Pokemonas': Bacteria related to lung parasites discovered, named after Pokémon Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:03 AM PDT |
Researchers analyzed circulating currents inside gold nanoparticles Posted: 30 Apr 2021 09:03 AM PDT Researchers have developed a method that allows for simulation and visualization of magnetic-field-induced electron currents inside gold nanoparticles. The method facilitates accurate analysis of magnetic field effects inside complex nanostructures in nuclear magnetic resonance measurements and establishes quantitative criteria for aromaticity of nanoparticles. |
A silver lining for extreme electronics Posted: 30 Apr 2021 06:32 AM PDT |
Northern forest fires could accelerate climate change Posted: 30 Apr 2021 06:32 AM PDT |
Diverse spectrum of neurons that govern movement Posted: 30 Apr 2021 06:32 AM PDT |
New genetic target for blood cancer treatment Posted: 30 Apr 2021 06:32 AM PDT |
Wasps are valuable for ecosystems, economy and human health (just like bees) Posted: 30 Apr 2021 06:32 AM PDT |
Cave deposits reveal Pleistocene permafrost thaw, absent predicted levels of CO2 release Posted: 30 Apr 2021 06:32 AM PDT Expanding the study of prehistoric permafrost thawing to North America, researchers found evidence in mineral deposits from caves in Canada that permafrost thawing took place as recently as 400,000 years ago, in temperatures not much warmer than today. But they did not find evidence the thawing caused the release of predicted levels of carbon dioxide stored in the frozen terrain. |
Defect that limits hybrid perovskites solar-cell performance identified Posted: 30 Apr 2021 06:31 AM PDT |
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Discarded ostrich eggshells provide timeline for our early African ancestors Posted: 30 Apr 2021 06:31 AM PDT Dating early human middens becomes uncertain beyond 50,000 years, when radiocarbon dating ceases to be useful. Uranium-series dating of marine shells and bone is uncertain by some 10% because of the structure of these materials. A team has now improved the method for a more stable discard: ostrich eggshells. The method extends the accuracy and precision of radiocarbon 10 times into the past, to about 500,000 years ago. |
Small galaxies likely played important role in evolution of the Universe Posted: 30 Apr 2021 06:31 AM PDT |
Icebreaker's cyclone encounter reveals faster sea ice decline Posted: 30 Apr 2021 06:31 AM PDT |
Eastern and Western house mice took parallel evolutionary paths after colonizing US Posted: 29 Apr 2021 11:26 AM PDT Parallel evolution is common, but do different animal populations evolve in similar ways and alter the same genes to adapt to similar environmental conditions? Researchers tested this in two U.S. populations of house mice. They found independent evolution of a heavier body and larger nests as Eastern and Western populations invaded northern habitats after introduction from Europe. Many of the same genes changed allele frequency along with the increase in body mass. |
Treatment found to improve cognitive function in patients with fragile X syndrome Posted: 29 Apr 2021 11:26 AM PDT |
Extent of human impact on the world's plant-life revealed Posted: 29 Apr 2021 11:26 AM PDT Research has shed new light on the impact of humans on Earth's biodiversity. The findings suggest that the rate of change in an ecosystem's plant-life increases significantly during the years following human settlement, with the most dramatic changes occurring in locations settled in the last 1500 years. |
How diet controls RNA maturation Posted: 29 Apr 2021 11:26 AM PDT Particularly sensitive to chemical modifications, mRNAs are molecules responsible for transmitting the information encoded in our genome, allowing for the synthesis of proteins. Two teams have focused on a specific type of chemical modification - called methylation - of mRNA molecules in the small worm Caenorhabditis elegans. They found that methylation on a particular sequence of an mRNA leads to its degradation and that this control mechanism depends on the worm's diet. |
How meningitis-causing bacteria may sense fever to avoid immune killing Posted: 29 Apr 2021 11:26 AM PDT Researchers have discovered a mechanism through which meningitis-causing bacteria can evade our immune system. In laboratory tests, they found that Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae respond to increasing temperatures by producing safeguards that keep them from getting killed. This may prime their defenses against our immune system and increase their chances of survival, the researchers say. |
Multi-drug resistant infection about to evolve within cystic fibrosis patients Posted: 29 Apr 2021 11:26 AM PDT Scientists have been able to track how a multi-drug resistant organism is able to evolve and spread widely among cystic fibrosis patients - showing that it can evolve rapidly within an individual during chronic infection. The researchers say their findings highlight the need to treat patients with Mycobacterium abscessus infection immediately, counter to current medical practice. |
A third of kids develop a mental health problem after concussion Posted: 29 Apr 2021 11:26 AM PDT |
Lightning and subvisible discharges produce molecules that clean the atmosphere Posted: 29 Apr 2021 11:19 AM PDT Lightning bolts break apart nitrogen and oxygen molecules in the atmosphere and create reactive chemicals that affect greenhouse gases. Now, a team of atmospheric chemists and lightning scientists have found that lightning bolts and, surprisingly, subvisible discharges that cannot be seen by cameras or the naked eye produce extreme amounts of the hydroxyl radical -- OH -- and hydroperoxyl radical -- HO2. |
Exploiting plants' ability to 'tell the time' to make food production more sustainable Posted: 29 Apr 2021 11:19 AM PDT |
Fish have been swallowing microplastics since the 1950s Posted: 29 Apr 2021 10:39 AM PDT |
Mapping the 'superhighways' traveled by the first Australians Posted: 29 Apr 2021 08:24 AM PDT |
The Arctic's greening, but it won't save us Posted: 29 Apr 2021 08:23 AM PDT |
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