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What Growing Up On Mars Would Do to the Human Body

An enjoyable article exploring the science of reproduction in space. I appreciate the genuine curiosity and hopeful outlook here!


The annual SXSW conference in Austin, Texas, can be a bit overwhelming. What started as a fairly modest four-day music festival in 1987, drawing some 700 attendees, has become a ten-day extravaganza of panel presentations featuring celebrities and business leaders, film screenings, technology showcases, and—yes—music. These days hundreds of thousands of people converge on downtown Austin for “South By,” as it’s called by those in the know. When I was a graduate student at the University of Texas in the early 2000s, I always avoided the festival and its inevitable crowds, which was relatively easy to do since it tended to be held the same week as the university’s Spring Break.

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But when I received an invitation in 2023 to attend a SXSW panel presentation with the title “Sex in Space: Sex and Reproduction Beyond Earth,” I knew I had to go. After all, any plans to create a permanent settlement on Mars or elsewhere in space wouldn’t last long if we can’t have kids there.

Astrocytes enable amygdala neural representations supporting memory

A thorough study exploring how astrocytes affect fear conditioning and fear extinction in the basolateral amygdala of mice. Subpopulations of astrocytes were found to interact with neurons in such a way as to help encode representations of fear. [ https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-10068-0](https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-10068-0)


Gq G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) signalling increases astrocyte Ca2+ activity through IP3-mediated release of intracellular Ca2+ stores42,43 and hM3Dq actuation causes a Ca2+ surge preceded by prolonged quiescence, possibly due to intracellular Ca2+ depletion24,44,45. Replicating these effects in the BLA, we expressed hM3Dq in BLA astrocytes and used in vivo cyto-GCaMP6f photometry and observed that clozapine–N-oxide (CNO) injection markedly increased Ca2+ activity within around 10 min but, thereafter, decreased and remained low for at least 2 h (Fig. 2c and Extended Data Figs. 6a–e and 8e, f). A lower hM3Dq virus concentration or lower CNO dose had modest or negligible effects on Ca2+ activity and behaviour (Extended Data Fig. 6h–p). On the basis of these data, we posited that BLA astrocyte Ca2+ dynamics would be constrained by hM3Dq actuation at timepoints relevant to behavioural testing. Consistent with this supposition, hM3Dq-actuation essentially abolished Ca2+ responses to a potent stimulus (footshock) given 30 min after CNO injection (Extended Data Fig. 6f, g).

We leveraged these effects of hM3Dq actuation to test how constraining astrocyte Ca2+ dynamics affected memory acquisition, retrieval, consolidation and extinction by injecting separate groups of animals with 3 mg per kg CNO either before or immediately after F-Con, or before fear retrieval/extinction training. We found that CNO given before extinction training reduced CS-related freezing during E-Ext—consistent with impaired memory retrieval—in hM3Dq-expressing mice compared with viral controls (Fig. 2d, e). In vivo fibre photometry confirmed that this behavioural effect was accompanied by loss of CS-related astrocyte Ca2+ responses (Fig. 2f and Extended Data Fig. 7a–c). In contrast to these memory-retrieval-impairing effects, CNO had no behavioural effect when injected before or after F-Con26,27 and did not alter uncued freezing, shock-induced flinching or various measures of anxiety-like behaviour (Extended Data Fig. 7d–i). Behavioural effects were also absent when CNO was injected in mice not expressing hM3Dq or when vehicle was injected in hM3Dq-expressing animals, excluding potential non-specific CNO and hM3Dq-virus effects, respectively (Extended Data Fig. 7j–n).

We next compared these effects with those of another DREADD, hM4Di, that produces effects on cortical, striatal and (as we show here; Fig. 2g–i) BLA astrocyte Ca2+ activity that mirror those of hM3Dq, that is, increase Ca2+ transients24,46,47. Accordingly, we found that hM4Di actuation produced effects on memory retrieval that were opposite to hM3Dq: pre-Ext CNO injection produced increases in CS-related freezing and astrocyte Ca2+ responses during E-Ext in hM4Di-expressing mice compared with viral controls (Fig. 2j–l and Extended Data Fig. 8a–f). Pre-Ext hM4Di actuation also increased freezing during (CNO-free) E-Ret, indicative of a deficit in extinction memory formation, and attenuated CS-related Ca2+ activity during this test stage. This latter effect is notable given that hM3Dq actuation produced a similar extinction deficit and blunted the CS-related Ca2+ response on E-Ret (Fig. 2e and Extended Data Fig. 7b), despite the two manipulations having opposite effects on fear retrieval and neither affecting extinction memory when CNO was given before E-Ret (Extended Data Fig. 8g, h). This convergence of extinction-impairing effects suggests that extinction is sensitive to perturbations—whether increases or decreases—in astrocyte Ca2+ activity and, by extension, implies an important role for BLA astrocytes in the plastic adaptations underlying extinction memory formation.

Phagocyte NADPH Oxidase NOX2-Derived Reactive Oxygen Species in Antimicrobial Defense: Mechanisms, Regulation, and Therapeutic Potential—A Narrative Review

ROS derived from NADPH oxidase, particularly NOX2, are central to antimicrobial defense, coupling direct pathogen killing with redox signaling that shapes inflammation. This narrative review integrates recent advances on NOX2 structure, assembly, and spatiotemporal control in phagocytes, and outlines how ROS interact with NF-κB, MAPK, and Nrf2 networks to coordinate microbicidal activity and immune modulation. We summarize evidence that both ROS deficiency, as in chronic granulomatous disease, and uncontrolled excess, as in sepsis and severe COVID-19, drive clinically significant pathology, emphasizing the need for precise redox balance.

Persistent Hemiplegic Migraine in a Child With CACNA1A Sequence Variation and New-Onset Cerebellar Atrophy: A Pediatric Stroke Mimic

Imaging results also demonstrated marked cerebellar atrophy, which is a recognized feature of CACNA1A-related disorders.13 Although the timing and progression of this abnormality are uncertain because UL last underwent brain imaging in infancy, the need for structured evaluation throughout development is clear. We also noted asymmetric fluid-attenuated inversion recovery signal in the left mesial temporal lobe, which was believed to be most consistent with postictal edema given the known overlap between CACNA1A channelopathies and seizure susceptibility.

This case highlights the diagnostic uncertainty of CACNA1A-related hemiplegic migraine and emphasizes the need for early exclusion of stroke and seizure, in addition to timely escalation of preventive therapy when symptoms persist beyond their typical timeframes. The clinical response to an increased acetazolamide dose, initiation of verapamil, and corticosteroids for cerebral edema provides additional support for current recommendations in a field where high-quality evidence remains limited.

Senescence Modulation: An Applied Science Review of Strategies in Anti-Aging, Regenerative Aesthetics, and Oncology Therapy

Cellular senescence is an irreversible cell cycle arrest, triggered by stressors like telomere shortening, DNA damage, and oncogenic signaling.

MRI antenna can boost image quality and shorten scan times—without changing existing machines

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is one of medicine’s most powerful diagnostic tools. But certain tissues deep inside the body—including brain regions and delicate structures of the eye and orbit that are of particular relevance for ophthalmology—are difficult to image clearly. The problem is not the scanner itself, but the hardware that sends and receives radio signals.

Now, researchers led by Nandita Saha, a doctoral student in the Experimental Ultrahigh Field Magnetic Resonance lab of Professor Thoralf Niendorf at the Max Delbrück Center have developed an advanced materials-based MRI antenna that overcomes these limitations—delivering enhanced images more quickly and that can be used in existing MRI machines. The research was published in Advanced Materials.

Niendorf and his team worked closely with researchers at Rostock University Medical Center, combining expertise in MRI physics with clinical ophthalmology and translational imaging. The Rostock team is also supporting clinical validation of the technology.

Relationship Between Hematoma Location and Underlying Small Vessel Disease in Cerebellar Intracerebral Hemorrhage

Background and ObjectivesIn supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), hematoma location serves as a useful proxy for the underlying cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD) subtype, especially in the context of the Boston criteria. Whether this framework…

‘Learn-to-Steer’ method improves AI’s ability to understand spatial instructions

Researchers from the Department of Computer Science at Bar-Ilan University and from NVIDIA’s AI research center in Israel have developed a new method that significantly improves how artificial intelligence models understand spatial instructions when generating images—without retraining or modifying the models themselves. Image-generation systems often struggle with simple prompts such as “a cat under the table” or “a chair to the right of the table,” frequently placing objects incorrectly or ignoring spatial relationships altogether. The Bar-Ilan research team has introduced a creative solution that allows AI models to follow such instructions more accurately in real time.

The new method, called Learn-to-Steer, works by analyzing the internal attention patterns of an image-generation model, effectively offering insight into how the model organizes objects in space. A lightweight classifier then subtly guides the model’s internal processes during image creation, helping it place objects more precisely according to user instructions. The approach can be applied to any existing trained model, eliminating the need for costly retraining.

The results show substantial performance gains. In the Stable Diffusion SD2.1 model, accuracy in understanding spatial relationships increased from 7% to 54%. In the Flux.1 model, success rates improved from 20% to 61%, with no negative impact on the models’ overall capabilities.

Emerging mechanisms of psilocybin-induced neuroplasticity

Psilocybin, a serotonergic psychedelic, is gaining attention for its rapid and sustained therapeutic effects in depression and other hard-to-treat neuropsychiatric conditions, potentially through its capacity to enhance neuronal plasticity. While its neuroplastic and therapeutic effects are commonly attributed to serotonin 2A (5-HT2A) receptor activation, emerging evidence reveals a more nuanced pharmacological profile involving multiple serotonin receptor subtypes and nonserotonergic targets such as TrkB. This review integrates current findings on the molecular interactome of psilocin (psilocybin active metabolite), emphasizing receptor selectivity, biased agonism, and intracellular receptor localization.

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