Toggle light / dark theme

Get the latest international news and world events from around the world.

Log in for authorized contributors

SIRT6 protein could protect against age-related breakdown in chromatin, possibly help reverse aging

Researchers at Bar-Ilan University have successfully restored youthful patterns of DNA organization in the livers of old mice, reversing key molecular features associated with aging. The study, published in Nature Communications, identifies the protein SIRT6 as a powerful protector against age-related breakdown in chromatin, the complex system that packages DNA and controls how genes are switched on and off.

The findings suggest that aging is not simply a passive process of wear and tear, but may be driven in part by reversible changes in the way DNA is organized inside cells.

DNA inside cells is tightly folded and packaged into chromatin, a structure that acts like a biological control system for gene activity. Using advanced tools to study DNA organization and gene activity, the researchers examined multiple molecular changes in the livers of young and old mice. What they discovered was dramatic: aging disrupts chromatin architecture in the liver, causing inflammatory pathways to become overactive while weakening the metabolic programs that define healthy liver tissue.

Pronounced Neuroplasticity in the Primary Visual Cortex of the Thirteen-lined Ground Squirrel During Hibernation

Hibernating animals can show neuroplasticity throughout the hibernation season. In ground squirrels, decreased dendritic arborization in the hippocampus, somatosensory cortex, and thalamus during deep hibernation (“torpor”) suggests that this neuroplasticity is a brain-wide phenomenon. However, the degree to which neuroplasticity occurs in the visual system is not clear. While transient retinal changes have been reported during torpor, neuroplasticity beyond the retina remains unknown. Here, we characterized hibernation-related neuroplasticity in the primary visual cortex (V1), the first cortical area to receive visual information, in the thirteen-lined ground squirrel (Ictidomys tridecemlineatus). We compared neuronal morphology in Golgi-stained samples from male and female hibernating or non-hibernating squirrels. For the hibernating squirrels, brain tissue was sampled during two different epochs: torpor and inter-torpor arousal. Dendritic arborization decreased during torpor in V1 layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons, manifesting as decreases in dendritic length, number, and complexity. These changes fully reversed during inter-torpor arousal, indicating that on average dendritic arbors grew by 0.75 mm (65%) over ∼1.5 hours. No morphological differences between hibernating and non-hibernating squirrels were apparent when compared 6 months after the hibernation season. We also found no neuroplastic changes in V1 layer 4 spiny stellate neurons, unlike in this cell type the somatosensory cortex. Together, this revealed, for the first time, hibernation-related neuroplasticity in V1 in support of a brain-wide mechanism but with area-specific differences. The speed and magnitude of this naturally occurring neuroplasticity could make ground squirrel V1 a powerful translational model system for conditions requiring neuroplasticity, such as recovery from stroke.

Significance Statement This study is the first demonstration of pronounced hibernation-related neuroplasticity in the primary visual cortex of ground squirrels. Layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1) reduced arborization during torpor. Within 1.5 hours after arousal from torpor, the arborization reversed to non-hibernation levels. The extent and speed of this naturally occurring neuroplasticity could make the relatively well-understood V1 of ground squirrels a powerful translational model system. Complementing insights on neuroplasticity in V1 during development, it has the potential to be leveraged for the study of treatment mechanisms and conditions requiring neuroplasticity, ranging from neurodegeneration to recovery after stroke.

Busseiron and the formation of a discipline in Japanese physics

The middle of the twentieth century was a period of significant scientific advancement, particularly in the realm of physics. Within this rapidly changing landscape, academic disciplines emerged and evolved to keep pace with scientific discoveries. The new subdiscipline of solid-state physics gained prominence in the United States, but it was later subsumed by the broader category of condensed matter physics.

In Japan, however, physics research since the 1940s has included a unique branch called Busseiron—a discipline concerning the study of matter that has no direct English equivalent but that has remained in use nonetheless.

A new article by Hiroto Kono in Isis: A Journal of the History of Science Society explores the historical formation of Busseiron and how it was shaped by its specific national context.

Consistency check casts doubt on evolving dark energy

Cosmologists have long struggled to determine whether the universe’s accelerating expansion is being driven by a simple cosmological constant, or whether dark energy’s influence is evolving over time. In a new analysis published in Physical Review D, Samsuzzaman Afroz and Suvodip Mukherjee at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, have identified a subtle impact on the inference of the nature of dark energy, due to a tiny mismatch between a fundamental cosmological distance relation and two key datasets used to measure the properties of dark energy.

The result casts fresh doubt on the robustness of the recent claims that dark energy could be evolving over time—perhaps bringing us a step closer to solving one of cosmology’s most enduring challenges.

Tritium-infused graphene could sharpen the hunt for neutrino mass

While neutrinos are some of the most abundant particles in the universe, they remain among the least understood. One of the biggest puzzles is their mass: although experiments have shown that neutrinos must have some mass, pinning down exactly how much has proven extraordinarily difficult.

Now, a team of physicists led by Valentina Tozzini of the Institute of Nanoscience in Pisa have published new theoretical calculations in Physical Review C, suggesting that tritium-infused graphene could give future experiments a decisive edge in measuring neutrino masses with unprecedented precision.

Chemists use sea sponge bacteria to create new molecules for drug discovery

Florida State University chemists have synthesized new molecules derived from bacteria found in a Pacific Ocean sea sponge, a breakthrough for the future of drug development, particularly for rare forms of cancer.

“Around 50% of approved drugs are either natural products or derivatives of natural products,” said Zackary Firestone, a fourth-year doctoral student in FSU’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and the study’s lead author. “Synthetic access to these molecules is important because it allows for easier procurement for biological testing as well as the making of new derivatives.”

The research team is the first to successfully synthesize two new marine natural products: tetradehydrohalicyclamine B and epi-tetradehydrohalicyclamine B. Both were isolated from bacteria that lives in symbiosis with Acanthostrongylophora ingens, a Pacific-dwelling sea sponge.

Migrating charges unlock hard-to-reach C-H bond edits in organic molecules

A team at the University of Vienna, led by chemist Nuno Maulide, has developed a new method for controlling chemical reactions in a more targeted and efficient manner. At the heart of this is the concept of “cation sampling”: specially selected groups (ketones), in a sense, function as molecular signposts for randomly migrating positive charges, enabling reactions to take place at sites on a molecule that were previously difficult to access. The method allows carbon-hydrogen bonds (C–H bonds) to be specifically modified. The study was published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

Organic molecules form the basis of almost all biological processes. They consist mainly of carbon and hydrogen—and hydrogen atoms in particular are very common in such molecules. “If you want to alter the properties of a molecule, you often have to specifically replace individual hydrogen atoms,” explains Philipp Spieß, a former Ph.D. student in the Maulide group and one of the study’s lead authors.

The precise modification of C–H bonds is therefore considered one of the key challenges of modern synthetic chemistry. It plays an important role in the development of new drugs, functional materials and more efficient chemical processes.

/* */