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Glomerular basement membrane structural integrity dictates trans-tissue deposition of laminin in the kidney

Omachi and Lin et al. uncover an unexpected source of ectopic laminin-α2 deposition in the glomerular basement membrane in Alport syndrome. They show that laminin-α2 circulates in blood and deposits according to basement membrane integrity, revealing a trans-tissue route for extracellular matrix deposition in mammals.

SoulMate LLM accelerator evolves according to the specific characteristics of the user

While large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT are adept at answering countless questions, they often remain unaware of a user’s minor habits or previous conversational contexts. This is why AI, despite being deeply integrated into our daily lives, can still feel like a “stranger.” Overcoming these limitations, researchers at KAIST, led by Professor Hoi-Jun Yoo from the Graduate School of AI Semiconductors, have developed the world’s first AI semiconductor, dubbed “SoulMate,” which learns and adapts to a user’s speech style, preferences, and emotions in real-time—becoming a true “digital soulmate.”

This technology is being hailed as a core semiconductor breakthrough that will accelerate the era of “hyper-personalized AI”—moving beyond “AI for everyone” to an AI that learns and responds to an individual’s unique conversational style and preferences. The work is published in the proceedings of the 2026 IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC).

Consequences of the Novel ALS-Associated KIF5A Variant c.2993-6C

Regulation and activation of UvrD-family DNA helicases/ translocases.

For the past few decades, the active form of superfamily 1A (SF1A) UvrDfamily helicases has been controversial due to the absence of structures of the active dimeric form of these enzymes.

A key interaction in the monomeric structures is between a regulatory domain (2B) and duplex DNA that was proposed to facilitate DNA unwinding but is likely inhibitory.

However, recent cryo-EM structures show that Mycobacterium tuberculosis UvrD1 forms a covalent dimer, with dimerization occurring between the 2B domains of each subunit, resulting in major reorientations of the 2B domains that prevent the 2B–DNA interaction, thus relieving its inhibitory effect.

The same dimerization interface is used in Escherichia coli UvrD dimers, suggesting that this is a general mechanism to activate most SF1A helicases.

Due to these insights, textbook descriptions of helicase mechanisms based on the monomeric structures require re-evaluation. sciencenewshighlights ScienceMission https://sciencemission.com/conundrum-resolved


Defining Alzheimer’s disease: stipulations and the ethics of diagnostic change

In this really interesting essay, Michalon et al discuss defining Alzheimer’s disease in response to recent discussions on revising the definition and diagnostic criteria for the condition. The essay provides interesting historical context to the debate.


Recent revisions of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) definitions by two leading research groups—the Alzheimer’s Association and the International Working Group—reflect divergent approaches: the former promotes a strictly biological definition, while the latter promotes a clinicalbiological construct. We contend that this emerging controversy is not merely semantic, but scientifically, clinically, and politically significant. Drawing on philosophical tools and situating the current debate within a broader historical context from the reconceptualization of AD in the 1970s onwards, we explore how definitions can serve as transformative instruments, acting as strategic bets that reshape scientific fields and clinical practices. Ultimately, we draw from the AD case study to argue for a critical reflection on the risks and promises of such definitional acts. We also propose a renewed attention to the ‘ethics of stipulating’ in the field of contemporary biomedical sciences.

In response to advances in diagnostics and therapeutics, two major research groups specialising in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) have recently revised their definition and diagnostic criteria for the condition. While they concur on certain aspects—most notably, the centrality of amyloid and tau pathologies—the two groups have proposed different types of definition. The Alzheimer’s Association (AA) group asserts the following fundamental principle: “AD is defined by its unique neuropathologic findings; therefore, detection of AD neuropathologic change by biomarkers is equivalent to diagnosing the disease” 1(p.5145). This definition regards specific biological changes as the unique defining feature rather than a joint characteristic, together with specific symptoms, of a disease. In this framework, asymptomatic individuals can be diagnosed with ‘preclinical AD’

The way you walk can reveal your true feelings

Whether you’re striding with purpose, swaggering with confidence, or trudging slowly along the street, the way you walk can reveal how you’re feeling, according to new research published in the journal Royal Society Open Science. We already know that some features of our gait can reflect our emotional state, such as heavy steps conveying anger and slumped shoulders indicating sadness. However, researchers led by Mina Wakabayashi at the Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International in Japan and her colleagues sought to determine whether there is a specific, coordinated movement pattern that reliably signals these emotional states.

The team conducted two experiments. In the first, they asked actors to recall life events that evoked anger, happiness, fear, and sadness, and to then walk a short distance while contemplating each memory. The actors also walked with a neutral expression to give the researchers a baseline for comparison.

The recordings were then converted into point-light videos of 17 white dots representing the body’s main joints, which were shown to adult volunteers who had to click a button to identify the emotion they perceived. They correctly identified emotions at a level significantly above chance.

Superconductor advancement could unlock ultra-energy-efficient electronics

Superconducting materials could play a crucial role in the energy-efficient applications of the future. However, several technical challenges still stand in the way of their practical use. Now, researchers at Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden have developed a new material design that addresses a major obstacle in the field: enabling superconductivity to operate at higher temperatures while also withstanding strong magnetic fields. This breakthrough could pave the way for far more energy-efficient electronics and quantum technologies.

Digital devices, data centers and information and communications technology (ICT) networks currently account for approximately 6% to 12% of global electricity consumption. There is a substantial and growing need for more energy-efficient electronics and this is where superconducting materials have emerged as a promising solution. Unlike conventional electronics, which lose energy as heat, superconductors can conduct electricity with zero energy loss. Thus, superconductors have the potential to make power grids, electronics and quantum technologies hundreds of times more energy efficient.

However, the path to real-world applications is still blocked by several key challenges. One major obstacle is that superconducting states often require extremely low temperatures—down to around −200°C. Cooling to such temperatures is complex and energy-intensive. Another major challenge is that superconductivity can be weakened or destroyed by strong magnetic fields. This is a critical limitation, as magnetic fields are often present in advanced electronic devices and are essential to many quantum technologies.

Challenging a 300-year-old law of friction

Researchers at the University of Konstanz have uncovered a new mechanism of sliding friction: resistance to motion that arises without any mechanical contact, driven purely by collective magnetic dynamics. The study, published in Nature Materials, shows that friction does not necessarily increase steadily with load, as postulated by Amontons’ law—one of the oldest and most fundamental empirical laws of physics—but can instead exhibit a pronounced maximum when internal magnetic ordering becomes frustrated.

For more than three centuries, Amontons’ law has linked friction directly to load, reflecting the everyday experience that heavier objects are harder to move; for example, pushing a heavy piece of furniture requires far more effort than sliding a light chair. This behavior is commonly attributed to tiny deformations of the surfaces in contact under load, which increase the number of microscopic contact points and thereby enhance friction.

In most classical situations, these deformations remain small and do not qualitatively change the internal structure of the materials during sliding. It is therefore not clear whether Amontons’ law will also hold when sliding induces much stronger internal reconfigurations, as can occur in magnetic materials where motion can modify the magnetic order.

Terahertz spin waves can be converted into computer signals, study shows

What will the computers of tomorrow look like? Chances are good that spintronics will play a decisive role in the next generation of computers. In spintronics, the intrinsic angular momentum of an electron (the spin) is used to store, process and transmit data. This technology is already in use today, for example in hard drives. However, the scope of what is possible extends much further: More recent approaches aim at using not just individual spins, but entire spin waves made up of partly hundreds of trillions of spins. Such collective spin excitations are known as magnons. They could enable extremely energy-efficient data transmission—even in the terahertz range.

So far, so good. But how can these spin waves be coupled to today’s technology? “If we develop a concept to perform computer calculations with magnons, it must be compatible with the technology we currently use,” says physicist Davide Bossini from the University of Konstanz. “To reach this goal, you have to convert the spin wave into an electrical charge signal.” This spin-to-charge conversion is one of the major challenges of spintronics.

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