Convergence in the Canopy: Why the Gracixalus weii treefrog sounds like a songbird
2026-03-10
The genus Gracixalus belongs to the family of Old World Tree Frogs and is geographically dispersed from Myanmar and western Thailand to Laos, Vietnam, and further to southern China. Despite the considerable number of research on the species richness of Gracixalus, little is known about their vocalisations. To remedy this problem, the recently described Gracixalus weii in southwest China has been investigated from a bioacoustic standpoint by researchers led by Caichun Peng of the Guizhou Leigongshan Forest Ecosystem Observation and Research Station.
Published in the open-access scholarly journal Herpetozoa, the research group’s ...
Subway systems are uncomfortably hot — and worsening
2026-03-10
For millions of commuters, the workday doesn’t just begin with a train ride. It also begins with a blast of heat.
In one of the largest studies ever conducted on thermal comfort in metro systems, Northwestern University scientists found that subway riders consistently report feeling uncomfortably hot while underground.
Rather than relying on traditional surveys — which are expensive and capture only brief snapshots of conditions in time and place — the team turned to real-world feedback. Searching for comments about thermal discomfort ...
Granular activated carbon-sorbed PFAS can be used to extract lithium from brine
2026-03-10
Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, are primarily thought of as environmental pollutants, and most research on them focuses on removing them from the environment. Rice researcher James Tour, however, has a different approach. His team, led by postdoctoral associate and Rice Academy Junior Fellow Yi Cheng, developed a process to use PFAS to extract lithium from high-salinity brine pools in a study recently published in Nature Water.
“Extracting lithium from brine can be less environmentally damaging than conventional mining, but it still faces challenges such as selectivity, ...
How AI is integrated into clinical workflow lowers medical liability perception
2026-03-10
HERSHEY, Pa. — Artificial intelligence (AI) is changing the field and practice of medicine, including legal liability and the perception of who is at fault when a patient experiences harm.
“AI holds promise to improve the quality and safety of health care and to reduce errors and patient harm, but the risk of legal liability is a potential barrier for investment and development of this technology as well as the quality of care,” said Michael Bruno, professor of radiology and of medicine at Penn State College of Medicine.
Now, Bruno, working alongside a team of researchers from Brown University and Seton Hall University School of Law, ...
New biotech company to accelerate treatments for heart disease
2026-03-10
A new biotech company forged through an Australian and Danish partnership will accelerate treatments for children and adults with heart disease. Harnessing cellular therapies, the company aims to conduct human clinical trials within three to five years.
Ibnova Therapeutics, launched today, has emerged from world-first, collaborative research by Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI) in Melbourne and QIMR Berghofer in Brisbane. Within MCRI, this work is supported by the Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Stem Cell Medicine (reNEW), which is headquartered ...
One gene makes the difference: research team achieves breakthrough in breeding winter-hardy faba beans
2026-03-10
The faba bean is an ancient crop. It is particularly valuable because it is high in protein, and can convert nitrogen from the air into a form that can be used by plants in the soil. This makes it a sustainable alternative to soy, particularly in Europe. However, many varieties are not winter-hardy. In cold regions, they do not survive frost.
Firstly, the research team succeeded in significantly improving the reference genome of the faba bean. Various methods, such as optical mapping, were used to assemble the genome’s individual sections more precisely. “Our new ...
Predicting brain health with a smartwatch
2026-03-10
Can smartphones or smartwatches help detect early signs of neurological or mental illness? Researchers at the University of Geneva (UNIGE) monitored a group of participants wearing connected devices, and used artificial intelligence to analyse data such as heart rate, physical activity, sleep and air pollution. Their findings show that connected devices can accurately predict emotional and cognitive fluctuations, opening new avenues for the early detection of changes in brain health. The study has been published in npj Digital Medicine.
Brain health, encompassing both cognitive and emotional functions, is one of the major public health challenges of the ...
How boron helps to produce key proteins for new cancer therapies
2026-03-10
Many of the key proteins for modern medicine and science are poorly soluble. These include numerous signalling proteins and protein hormones, as well as all of the receptors anchored in the cell membranes, which are targeted by around 60 percent of the active ingredients currently used in medicines. If the concentration of these proteins exceeds a certain threshold, they clump together and lose their function.
This clumping makes it impossible to produce these molecules synthetically in the lab. As protein production with specialised synthesis robots always requires multiple fragments to be coupled into a complete protein, ...
Writing the catalog of plasma membrane repair proteins
2026-03-10
In the evolutionary history of life, the ability of a cell to separate its inner world from the external environment was an important turning point. The so-called plasma membrane lets cells control what gets in and out and allows them to communicate and cooperate with one another, creating the conditions for complex, multicellular life.
This barrier is fragile. Every day, mechanical stress, environmental changes, and bacterial toxins threaten to puncture the membrane, and if the wounds aren’t sealed and healed quickly, the cell dies. Despite its importance to the survival of our cells, the processes of plasma membrane ...
A comprehensive review charts how psychiatry could finally diagnose what it actually treats
2026-03-10
CAMBRIDGE, Cambridgeshire, UNITED KINGDOM, 10 March 2026 — A comprehensive invited review published today in Brain Medicine confronts one of the most persistent paradoxes in modern medicine: psychiatry remains the only major clinical discipline that diagnoses complex illness primarily through conversation and symptom checklists, while fields such as oncology and cardiology long ago embraced laboratory markers, imaging, and molecular profiling. The review, authored by Dr. Jakub Tomasik, Jihan K. Zaki, and Professor Sabine Bahn at the Cambridge Centre for Neuropsychiatric Research, University of Cambridge, synthesizes emerging research across conceptual frameworks, ...
Thousands of genetic variants shape epilepsy risk, and most remain hidden
2026-03-10
OSLO, Eastern Norway, NORWAY, 10 March 2026 — An insightful mini-review published in Genomic Psychiatry synthesizes the rapidly expanding landscape of molecular genetic research on common epilepsies, assembling evidence from genome-wide association studies, whole-exome sequencing projects, and advanced statistical modeling to illuminate the polygenic architecture that underpins these heterogeneous neurological disorders. The synthesis, led by Dr. Olav B. Smeland of the Centre for Precision Psychiatry at Oslo University Hospital and the University of Oslo, draws a detailed portrait ...
First comprehensive sex-specific atlas of GLP-1 in the mouse brain reveals why blockbuster weight-loss drugs may work differently in females and males
2026-03-10
NEW YORK, New York, UNITED STATES, 10 March 2026 — The drugs have names that sound like small planets: semaglutide, liraglutide, lixisenatide. Collectively they belong to a class of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) analogs that has reshaped the treatment of obesity and diabetes so thoroughly that the word "blockbuster" barely covers it. And yet for all the billions of dollars spent, for all the prescriptions written, a fundamental question has lingered like a low hum beneath the clinical noise: where, precisely, does GLP-1 live inside the brain, ...
When rats run, their gut bacteria rewrite the chemical conversation with the brain
2026-03-10
CORK, Munster, IRELAND, 10 March 2026 — Something happens when a rat starts running. Not just the obvious things, the faster heart, the warming muscles, the rhythmic percussion of paws against the wheel. Something quieter. Something that begins in the coiled darkness of the gut and travels, through blood and biochemistry, all the way to the hippocampus, that seahorse-shaped sliver of tissue where memories form and moods take root. A new study published in Brain Medicine, a Genomic Press journal, ...
Movies reconstructed from mouse brain activity
2026-03-10
Scientists have successfully reconstructed videos purely from the brain activity of mice, showing what the mice were seeing, in a new study led by University College London (UCL) researchers.
The findings, published in eLife, could help shed light on the intricate workings of how the brain processes visual information and open new avenues for exploring how different species perceive the world.
Over recent years, there has been a growing interest in understanding exactly how the human brain interprets ...
Subglacial weathering may have slowed Earth's escape from snowball Earth
2026-03-10
A new study led by researchers at the Earth-Life Science Institute (ELSI) at Institute of Science Tokyo challenges a long-standing assumption about Earth's most extreme ice ages. Using numerical geochemical models, the team showed that chemical weathering may have continued beneath thick continental ice sheets during the snowball Earth event, consuming atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO₂) and potentially prolonging the global glaciation. The findings provide a new explanation for the unusually long duration of some ancient global glaciations.
"Our results demonstrate that subglacial weathering represents a previously unrecognised feedback mechanism that could account ...
Simple test could transform time to endometriosis diagnosis
2026-03-10
A simple 5-minute test addressing major endometriosis diagnostic delays and treatment, has been developed by University of Queensland researchers.
The Simplified Adolescent Factors for Endometriosis (SAFE) score uses a questionnaire to identify at-risk patients and fast track specialist referrals for further investigation.
Professor Gita Mishra AO, Centre Director of UQ’s Australian Women and Girls' Health Research Centre, said the test could prevent years of waiting for a diagnosis.
“The test uses 6 questions to detect girls or young women at risk ...
Why ‘being squeezed’ helps breast cancer cells to thrive
2026-03-10
A new study led by researchers at Adelaide University and published in Science Advances has revealed why some cancers can grow and survive in the body, while others cannot.
It turns out that intense mechanical pressure experienced by early cancer cells as they grow cramped in a restricted space can benefit some cancer cells, rather than impede growth, as might be expected.
Scientists found that early breast cancer cells used this ‘squeeze’ to their advantage.
Lead researcher Professor Michael Samuel from Adelaide University’s Centre for Cancer Biology and the Basil ...
Mpox immune test validated during Rwandan outbreak
2026-03-10
An antibody test for the infectious disease Mpox was successfully developed during the new clade 1b outbreak in Rwanda, the first time that an assay of its kind has been validated within this setting.
The test, an IgG ELISA assay, is described in a new paper published in Lancet Infectious Diseases. Developed by a team from the University of Birmingham in collaboration with the Rwanda Biomedical Centre (RBC) and the University of Rwanda, the highly accurate test for Mpox antibodies was successfully ...
Scientists pinpoint protein shapes that track Alzheimer’s progression
2026-03-09
LA JOLLA, CA—Alzheimer's disease affects an estimated 7.2 million Americans age 65 and older, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. Current tests often measure the levels of two proteins—amyloid beta (Aβ) and phosphorylated tau (p-tau)—in the blood or spinal fluid, but these markers may not fully capture earlier biological changes linked to disease progression.
Now, scientists at Scripps Research have developed a blood-based approach that examines how proteins are folded in the bloodstream rather than simply measuring their concentrations. Their study, published in Nature Aging on February 27, 2026, reports that ...
Researchers achieve efficient bicarbonate-mediated integrated capture and electrolysis of carbon dioxide
2026-03-09
In a study published in Angewandte Chemie International Edition, a team led by Profs. BAO Xinhe, GAO Dunfeng, and ZHANG Guohui from the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics (DICP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, along with Prof. WANG Guoxiong from Fudan University, achieved efficient bicarbonate-mediated integrated carbon dioxide (CO2) capture and electrolysis to CO through an ionomer-driven reaction microenvironment control strategy.
Traditional CO2 capture and conversion routes from industrial flue gas typically follow a "capture-release-compression-electrolysis" tandem pathway. ...
Study reveals ancient needles and awls served many purposes
2026-03-09
A study led by McKenna Litynski, a recent Ph.D. graduate in anthropology and adjunct assistant professor at the University of Wyoming, confirms that ancient needles and awls enabled humans to survive in cold climates and shows these tools served a variety of purposes beyond clothing production, from medicine to ceremony.
Some 100,000 years ago, humans began to expand around the globe, including into some of the world’s coldest environments. Scholars have long hypothesized that this remarkable expansion was made possible by a profoundly humble technology: the ...
Key protein SYFO2 enables 'self-fertilization’ of leguminous plants
2026-03-09
Most plants allow fungal microorganisms to enter their root cells and provide them with carbohydrates in exchange for a better supply of nutrients and water. Only leguminous plants like peas, beans, and clover enter into an additional, mutually beneficial symbiosis with nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria. The alliance with so-called rhizobia enables them to supply themselves with the nitrogen they need for their growth from the air.
Within the context of the Enabling Nutrient Symbiosis in Agriculture (ENSA) ...
AI tool streamlines drug synthesis
2026-03-09
Drug discovery is like molecular Tetris. Chemists snap atoms together, adjusting the pieces until everything fits and suddenly, a molecule makes a promising new medicine. Normally, creating better molecules consumes huge amounts of time and money.
In a new study, researchers used machine learning to build a smarter prediction system that could speed up the process at a fraction of the cost.
“Sometimes we use sophisticated, physics-based computational chemistry tools to understand novel reactions. However, these tools are too expensive to make predictions on thousands of potential new molecules,” said Simone Gallarati, the study’s co-lead author ...
Turning orchard waste into climate solutions: A simple method boosts biochar carbon storage
2026-03-09
Researchers have developed a practical and low cost method to transform agricultural waste into high quality biochar, significantly increasing its ability to store carbon and help combat climate change. The study demonstrates that a simple treatment using limewater can dramatically improve the efficiency of biochar production while keeping the process accessible for use directly in the field.
Biochar is a carbon rich material produced when plant biomass is heated in low oxygen conditions. Because the carbon in biochar remains stable in soil for long periods, scientists consider it a promising carbon negative technology that can help remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. However, traditional ...
New ACP papers say health care must be more accessible and inclusive for patients and physicians with disabilities
2026-03-09
New ACP papers say health care must be more accessible and inclusive for patients and physicians with disabilities
Abstract: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/ANNALS-25-04524
Abstract: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/ANNALS-25-04518
Editorial: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/ANNALS-25-05480
URL goes live when the embargo lifts
Two new papers from the American College of Physicians (ACP) address barriers to health care for people with disabilities and offer policy recommendations ...
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