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The Fight For Slow And Boring Research

Great article. I should note that it actually has nothing to do with slow and boring research — it’s about the importance of scientists practicing good communication and public engagement to facilitate fundraising from non-governmental sources.


As federal research funding shrinks, scientists are looking to other sources of support. Can they learn to sell their work without selling out?

Since the middle of the twentieth century, the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation have embodied an imperfect social contract: Federal agencies would fund basic research at scale, and in return, that research would serve the public good through medical advances, technological progress, and economic growth.

For scientists, this system created a reliable pathway: Do good work, write strong grants, and federal agencies would keep your lab running. It was never a perfectly fair system, but it was predictable enough that you could build a life around it. If your work was solid and your grants were strong, the system would fund you.

Affecting a Signaling Pathway Alleviates Alzheimer’s in Mice

A new study shows that the overexpression of somatostatin (SST), a neuropeptide produced in neurons and acting mostly on microglia, lowers inflammation and amyloid β burden, improving cognitive abilities in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s. Drugs affecting this pathway are already available [1].

The unusual suspect

In Alzheimer’s disease, many signaling pathways in the brain become dysregulated. Since going after the main hallmarks of the disease (amyloid β and tau protein accumulation) has only yielded modest results so far, scientists are exploring various secondary targets whose levels correlate with the disease.

Species-specific oxygen sensing governs the initiation of vertebrate limb regeneration

Why mammals cannot regenerate limbs like amphibians do presents a long-standing puzzle in biology. To uncover the underlying differences, we compared amputation responses of embryonic mouse (Mus musculus) and Xenopus laevis tadpole limbs. Lowering environmental oxygen or stabilizing the oxygen-sensitive hypoxia-inducible factor 1A (HIF1A) induced rapid wound healing in mouse limbs. This response was accompanied by altered cellular mechanics, metabolism, and a histone landscape that primed regenerative cell states. Conversely, Xenopus tadpole limbs retained these features even under high oxygen levels. Their reduced oxygen-sensing capacity was associated with decreased HIF1A-regulating gene expression. Our results thus identify species-specific oxygen-sensing capacity as a fundamental, targetable mechanism that can unlock latent regenerative programs in mammals.

Striatal Dopamine Transporter and Rest Tremor in Parkinson DiseaseA Clinical Validation

【】 Full article: (Authored by Nader Butto, from Petah Tikva, Israel.)

This work presents a vortex-based geometric interpretation of atomic structure, in which electrons are described as localized vortex excitations embedded in a structured vacuum, offering a physically intuitive framework for understanding shells, subshells, orbitals, quantum numbers, and electron configurations without altering the formal structure of quantum mechanics. QUANTUM_NUMBERS vortex_geometry ElectronConfiguration.


1. Introduction

The atomic structure of matter represents one of the foundational achievements of modern physics and chemistry. Early experimental investigations by Rutherford established the nuclear model of the atom [1], while Bohr introduced the concept of discrete electronic energy levels to explain atomic spectra [2]. Sommerfeld subsequently extended this picture by incorporating angular momentum quantization and relativistic corrections [3]. These developments paved the way for the formulation of quantum mechanics, which replaced classical electron orbits with a wave-based description of electronic states.

The quantum-mechanical framework, formalized through the work of Schrödinger, Pauli, Born, and Dirac, provides a mathematically rigorous and highly successful description of atomic behavior [4]-[7]. Within this formalism, electrons are described by wavefunctions whose squared modulus gives the probability density of finding an electron in a given region of space. Atomic orbitals arise as solutions of the Schrödinger equation and are characterized by a set of quantum numbers that determine their energy, angular momentum, spatial orientation, and spin. This approach accurately predicts atomic spectra, selection rules, and chemical periodicity.

Low-Dose Rivaroxaban to Prevent Left Ventricular Thrombosis After Anterior Myocardial Infarction: The APERITIF Randomized Clinical Trial

Among patients with anterior myocardial infarction, adding low-dose rivaroxaban to dual antiplatelet therapy did not significantly reduce left ventricular thrombus formation at 1 month but increased minor bleeding.


Importance Anterior acute myocardial infarction is associated with increased risk of left ventricular (LV) thrombus. The benefit and risk of adding an oral anticoagulant to dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) in preventing LV thrombus remain uncertain.

Objective To determine whether the addition of low-dose rivaroxaban to DAPT reduces the incidence of LV thrombus at 1 month in patients with anterior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI).

Design, Setting, and Participants This multicenter, open-label, blinded–end point randomized clinical trial was performed in 29 centers in France. The trial was nested in the ongoing FRENCHIE (French Cohort of Myocardial Infarction Evaluation) registry. Between October 2021 and January 2023, patients with anterior STEMI were enrolled. The last date of participant follow-up was in March 2023. Data analysis was performed from September 2024 to July 2025.

Targeting the DSTYK-ULK1 axis rewires TNFR1 signaling to overcome treatment resistance in lung cancer

DSTYK amplification enables lung cancer cells to evade T cell killing by sustaining ULK1-dependent suppression of TNF-α-induced apoptosis. Targeting ULK1 dismantles this survival pathway, restoring RIPK1-mediated cell death and sensitizing DSTYK-altered tumors to chemo-immunotherapy, revealing a promising therapeutic vulnerability in NSCLC.

The Controversy Over Proton Therapy for Prostate Cancer

Proton beam therapy continues to generate significant interest — and controversy — in prostate cancer. About 45 cancer centers in the US offer proton therapy to treat a variety of cancers, including prostate cancer.

The technology, however, faces ongoing debate about its role in prostate cancer. Despite the buzz, there is no randomized evidence demonstrating that proton therapy is superior to the current standard of care: intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). The core question has become: Is proton therapy for prostate cancer worth it?


Does the evidence line up with the buzz surrounding the use of proton therapy to treat prostate cancer?

Predicting Heart Disease Risk With ApoB, LP(a), and VLDL

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Kidney health and function: https://www.ultalabtests.com/partners

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The gut can drive age-associated memory loss, research reveals

While it seems logical that age-related cognitive decline would be blamed on brain aging and degeneration (which, like anything in the brain, is notoriously hard to treat), there’s some evidence that processes elsewhere in the body influence the brain’s ability to form memories. In particular, neuronal pathways that sense the status of other organs in the body can influence cognitive functions in the brain.

Other studies have shown that our gut microbiome affects learning, memory, and behavior. But what we don’t yet understand is how these connections work—the specific molecules, microbes, and gut-brain communication involved—and whether we can use that knowledge to prevent or reverse age-related memory loss.

In our new work published today in Nature, we discovered that the aging gastrointestinal tract produces specific molecules that blunt the activity of a key gut-brain neuronal pathway, leading to age-related cognitive decline in mice.

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