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Near-atomic imaging reveals promising target for ‘Brain on Fire’ condition

Scientists have identified a promising target for treatment of a devastating autoimmune disease affecting the brain.

The discovery could lead to the development of new therapies for a disease triggered by an attack on one of the key neurotransmitter receptors in the brain, the NMDA receptor. It also raises the potential for a blood test to detect a signal of the condition and enable earlier treatment with existing therapies.

The study from Oregon Health & Science University is published in Science Advances.

AI and high-throughput testing reveal stability limits in organic redox flow batteries

In numerous scientific fields, high-throughput experimentation methods combined with artificial intelligence (AI) show great promise to accelerate innovation and scientific discovery.

Case in point: In just five months, researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory used robotics, automation and AI to conduct more than 6,000 experiments on chemicals in a type of rechargeable energy storage called organic redox flow batteries (RFBs). Such a monumental effort would have taken five to eight years with traditional experimentation.

Organic RFBs use carbon-based—that is, organic—molecules instead of traditional metal ions. Through their work, the researchers made a crucial finding about these batteries: A fundamental barrier at the molecular level limits their stability. The insight is expected to inspire exciting new directions in battery chemical research.

裂 The Virus That Rewrote Its Own Rulebook: What D1.1 Teaches Us About Living in an Evolving World

Bird Flu 2026

Researchers analyzed 17,500 genomes using Bayesian phylodynamics. Mapped origin, spread, and evolutionary timeline with precision.

The infrastructure failure: Of 1,722 D1.1 sequences, 9% have complete metadata (date + location).

We’re tracking a super-spreader blind.

#OpenScience #DataScience


“Avian Flu in North America: The D1.1 Evolutionary Leap” explores the emergence of a game-changing H5N1 virus variant that has fundamentally altered North America’s disease landscape since mid-2024. Through accessible explanation of cutting-edge genomic science, this episode reveals how the D1.1 genotype achieved unprecedented spread, infected all seven documented host categories including humans, and represents a major evolutionary shift. The podcast examines the massive computational effort behind tracking viral evolution, exposes critical gaps in our surveillance infrastructure, and confronts a paradigm-shifting reality: the Americas have become a primary engine of H5N1 evolution, reversing decades of global health assumptions.

Ray Dalio: AI Is Accelerating the Collapse — Most People Aren’t Ready for What’s Next

With rapid advancements in AI and automation, individuals must prepare for a potentially unstable future by building financial strength, adapting to change, and rethinking traditional economic policies to avoid societal collapse ## ## Questions to inspire discussion.

Financial Preparation.

💰 Q: How should I structure my finances to build wealth? A: Focus on the fundamental equation: earn minus spend equals save, then invest that saved amount wisely to determine your financial success, as this simple formula is the foundation of building financial strength.

🏃 Q: When should I consider relocating geographically? A: Evaluate your location during major financial shifts and changing world orders, as the ability to move to better places and away from bad places has been historically important for protecting wealth and opportunity.

Career Strategy.

🎯 Q: How do I choose a career that maximizes financial success? A: Select careers that align with your passions while understanding their financial implications, since the work you do will directly impact your financial success during economic transitions.

A protein found in the GI tract can neutralize many bacteria

The mucosal surfaces that line the body are embedded with defensive molecules that help keep microbes from causing inflammation and infections. Among these molecules are lectins—proteins that recognize microbes and other cells by binding to sugars found on cell surfaces.

One of these lectins, MIT researchers have found, has broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity against bacteria found in the GI tract. This lectin, known as intelectin-2, binds to sugar molecules found on bacterial membranes, trapping the bacteria and hindering their growth. Additionally, it can crosslink molecules that make up mucus, helping to strengthen the mucus barrier.

“What’s remarkable is that intelectin-2 operates in two complementary ways. It helps stabilize the mucus layer, and if that barrier is compromised, it can directly neutralize or restrain bacteria that begin to escape,” says Laura Kiessling, the Novartis Professor of Chemistry at MIT and the senior author of the study.

Collision-induced ribosome degradation driven by ribosome competition and translational perturbations

How cells eliminate inefficient ribosomes.

Inside every cell, ribosomes act as tiny but vital factories that build proteins, translating genetic information into the molecules that sustain life. Although ribosomes share the same basic structure, not all of them work with equal precision. Until now, scientists did not fully understand how cells detect and handle ribosomes that underperform.

Addressing this question, a team of researchers has identified a quality control mechanism that ensures only the most competent ribosomes survive. Their study, published in Nature Communications shows that ribosomes compete during protein synthesis. When translation is disrupted, the less efficient ribosomes are selectively broken down, while the stronger ones continue functioning.

Using biochemical and genetic analyses in yeast, the researchers examined how ribosomes behave when translation is disrupted. The team engineered cells to contain a functional but suboptimal ribosome variant. These slower-moving ribosomes are overtaken on messenger RNA by faster, native ribosomes, causing the two types to collide. Such ribosome-ribosome collisions activate a ubiquitination-dependent quality control pathway that selectively removes the less efficient ribosomes.

The team also explored how external factors, such as the anticancer drug cisplatin affect this process. Cisplatin, known for binding to RNA and DNA, was found to increase ribosome collisions, which in turn promoted ribosome degradation. This insight could improve understanding of how the drug acts inside cells and why it sometimes causes side effects.

The implications of this discovery extend beyond basic biology. By showing how cells maintain the quality of their protein factories, the study provides a foundation for understanding disorders caused by ribosome malfunction, known as ribosomopathies. It may also open the door to new approaches for improving the safety and effectiveness of certain drugs.

An earthquake on a chip: New tech could make smartphones smaller, faster

A team of engineers has made major strides in generating the tiniest earthquakes imaginable. The team’s device, known as a surface acoustic wave phonon laser, could one day help scientists make more sophisticated versions of chips in cellphones and other wireless devices—potentially making those tools smaller, faster and more efficient.

The study was conducted by Matt Eichenfield, an incoming faculty member at the University of Colorado Boulder, and scientists from the University of Arizona and Sandia National Laboratories. The researchers published their findings in the journal Nature.

The new technology utilizes a phenomenon known as surface acoustic waves, or SAWs act a little like soundwaves, but, as their name suggests, they travel only on the top layer of a material.

Astronomers discover 19 new pulsars by analyzing FAST archival data

Astronomers from Nanjing University in China have analyzed the archival data from the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST), searching for new pulsars. As a result, they detected 19 such objects that were missed by previous studies. The findings were presented January 5 on the pre-print server arXiv.

Pulsars are highly magnetized, rotating neutron stars emitting a beam of electromagnetic radiation. They are usually identified in the form of short bursts of radio emission; however, some of them are also observed via optical, X-ray and gamma-ray telescopes.

Spatial Reorganization of Chromatin Architecture Shapes the Expression Phenotype of Therapy‐Induced Senescent Cells

In the course of TIS, cells undergo a profound epigenomic reorganization that underlies the development of a senescence-associated phenotype and formation of an inflammatory microenvironment.

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