PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New understanding of avian eggshell attachment – implications for medical procedures and egg industry

2024-02-14
(Press-News.org) Athletes often suffer injuries to ligaments in their knees, particularly to the anterior cruciate ligament or ACL. While surgery to replace these torn ligaments is becoming increasingly common around the world it often needs to be repeated. That’s because it has proved challenging to anchor fibrous, soft and wet ligament grafting material into hard bone. 

Now, McGill University researchers have new information from the eggshell membrane in chicken eggs that could help change this picture thanks to the potential it offers for improvements in tissue engineering and biomaterial grafts.  

Their findings also have the potential to reduce losses for commercial egg and poultry producers.  

Anchoring soft and wet fibres by “nailing” them in place  The researchers discovered how the hard shell of a bird egg attaches to the underlying wet fibrous membrane of the egg (the thin membranous layer found inside the shell seen when peeling a hard-boiled egg). By using advanced 3D imaging X-ray and electron microscopes together with cryo-preservation methods the research team were able to peer into this interface in three dimensions to visualize and quantify the interlocking phenomenon. 

“Until now, no one had considered how this interface between these two very dissimilar substances, one a hard biorock, and the other a soft fibrous membrane, might be secured at the nanoscale,” says Marc McKee, a professor in the Faculty of Dental Medicine and Oral Health Sciences, and in the Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, and the principal investigator of the study conducted by doctoral student Daniel Buss and published recently in iScience. “What we found about this soft-hard interface is quite remarkable.” 

Nanospikes increase the surface area of contact between soft and hard materials and ensure food safety  The McGill team discovered that, at a certain stage in the development of an egg prior to laying, the shell sends mineral nanospikes into the soft and compliant surface fibres of the underlying eggshell membrane. This membrane surrounds the soft contents of the egg interior, being either the egg white and yolk from table eggs, or the developing chick embryo in a fertilized and incubated egg.  

This nanospiking attachment process between two highly dissimilar materials substantially increases the surface area of the interface between the soft and wet organic fibres and the hard and largely dry inorganic mineral. Such an attachment importantly anchors and secures this soft-hard interface to prevent slipping and sliding of the fibres within the shell.  

Otherwise, detachment of the membrane from the shell can be lethal for the embryonic chick, can weaken the shell, and/or can allow the invasion of pathogens (such as salmonella) into the interior contents of the egg. Food safety of the table egg relies on an intact shell that is well-integrated with its underlying membrane. 

Implications for medical procedures and commercial egg production  With this new understanding of the shell-membrane interface as being a characteristic feature of strong, safe and healthy eggs, losses for table egg producers and poultry breeders might be reduced through the establishment of commercial genetic breeding programs that maintain or maximize this interfacial structure.  

The findings might also potentially lead to new engineered, hybrid composite material designs, and to new procedures to improve the outcomes of various medical and dental reconstructive surgeries, both of which may require attaching soft wet fibres to hard materials.  

About the study “Attaching organic fibers to mineral: The case of the avian eggshell” by Daniel J. Buss , Natalie Reznikov , Marc D. McKee was published in iScience 

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2023.108425

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

HHMI opens National Competition for Freeman Hrabowski Scholars Program

HHMI opens National Competition for Freeman Hrabowski Scholars Program
2024-02-14
Today, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) opened a national competition to select up to 30 early career faculty in science to join the 2025 cohort of the Freeman Hrabowski Scholars Program.   Freeman Hrabowski Scholars are outstanding basic researchers, including physician-scientists, who have strong potential to become leaders in their fields. Scholars are committed to advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion through their mentoring efforts and understanding of systemic exclusion and marginalization in science of trainees from different backgrounds. While pursuing excellence in their own research, Scholars work to create an inclusive lab climate ...

Study: New treatment method helps reduce suicide among military and veterans

Study: New treatment method helps reduce suicide among military and veterans
2024-02-14
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is common among U.S. military veterans. It’s also linked with higher risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviors. A study led by researchers with The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and College of Medicine found that crisis response planning (CRP) can help. This brief intervention quickly reduced suicidal thoughts among patients receiving daily therapy for two weeks for PTSD. This type of therapy is called “cognitive processing therapy,” or CPT. “This study shows that crisis response planning can rapidly reduce suicide risk. It is the first study to prove this technique works when ...

The CRISPR Journal announces the publication of its February 2024 issue

The CRISPR Journal announces the publication of its February 2024 issue
2024-02-14
The CRISPR Journal announces the publication of its February 2024 issue. The CRISPR Journal is devoted to publishing outstanding research in CRISPR biology, technology, and genome editing. Chief Editor is Professor Rodolphe Barrangou, PhD (North Carolina State University); Executive Editor is Dr. Kevin Davies. For full-text copies of articles or to arrange interviews with the editors, authors, or members of the editorial board, contact Kathryn Ryan at the Publisher. 1. Warrior spirit: An interview with sickle cell pioneer Victoria Gray,  The gene editing world and the sickle cell disease (SCD) ...

COVID-19 vaccination and boosting during pregnancy protects infants for six months

COVID-19 vaccination and boosting during pregnancy protects infants for six months
2024-02-14
WHAT: Women who receive an mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccination or booster during pregnancy can provide their infants with strong protection against symptomatic COVID-19 infection for at least six months after birth, according to a study from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health. These findings, published in Pediatrics, reinforce the importance of receiving both a COVID-19 vaccine and booster during pregnancy to ensure that infants are born with robust protection that lasts until they are old enough to be vaccinated. COVID-19 is especially dangerous for newborns and young infants, and even healthy infants are vulnerable ...

Love songs lead scientists to new populations of skywalker gibbons in Myanmar

Love songs lead scientists to new populations of skywalker gibbons in Myanmar
2024-02-14
Skywalker gibbon couples wake up each morning and sing to each other, their voices echoing across the forest canopy of their home. The primate’s endearing love song helped scientists confirm what was formerly a strong hunch: Myanmar has the largest population of endangered Skywalker gibbons on Earth. When Star Wars-loving scientists identified Skywalker gibbons as a distinct species in 2017, fewer than 200 individuals were known to exist, all in southwestern China. A study published today in the International Journal of Primatology is the first in the past century to confirm living Skywalker gibbons in ...

Case study: drug-resistant bacteria responds to phage-antibiotic combo therapy

Case study: drug-resistant bacteria responds to phage-antibiotic combo therapy
2024-02-14
PITTSBURGH, Feb. 14, 2024 – It was a last-ditch effort. For years doctors had tried to keep a patient’s recurrent drug-resistant bacterial blood infection at bay, but it kept coming back and antibiotics were no longer working. The family agreed to try an experimental treatment that uses viruses to kill bacteria. The patient’s Enterococcus faecium bacterial strain, which had become zombie-like and was almost impossible to treat with currently available antibiotics, was tested against wastewater collected from across the country to find a virus – called a bacteriophage – that scientists theorized would specifically target the drug-resistant bacteria. It worked ...

ETRI unveils AI analysis service platform at international e-sports tournament

ETRI unveils AI analysis service platform at international e-sports tournament
2024-02-14
ETRI’s researchers have developed an AI-powered e-sports analysis platform that provides real-time win rate prediction services by analyzing gameplay screens. This platform was notably applied to the highly popular League of Legends (LoL) during a recent international e-sports tournament, garnering positive feedback. Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) has developed a technology that recognizes real-time game situations by analyzing play elements extracted from game videos and automatically generates highlights by identifying key play events in the game. Also, this e-sports service platform, based ...

Pancreatic cancer hijacks a brain-building protein

Pancreatic cancer hijacks a brain-building protein
2024-02-14
Scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) and the University of California, Davis have reached a new breakthrough in pancreatic cancer research—eight years in the making. It could help slow the disease’s deadly spread. In 2017, as a postdoc in CSHL’s Tuveson lab, Chang-il Hwang and collaborators from the Vakoc lab uncovered a protein essential for jumpstarting metastasis in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Now an assistant professor at UC Davis, Hwang recently reunited with CSHL Professors David Tuveson and Christopher Vakoc. The trio once again set their sights on PDAC. The disease is known for its aggressiveness. ...

Pesticides to help protect seeds can adversely affect earthworms’ health

Pesticides to help protect seeds can adversely affect earthworms’ health
2024-02-14
While pesticides protect crops from hungry animals, pesky insects, or even microbial infections, they also impact other vital organisms, including bees and earthworms. And today, research published in ACS’ Environmental Science & Technology Letters reveals that worms are affected by the relatively small amounts of chemicals that can leach out of pesticide-treated seeds. Exposure to nonlethal amounts of these insecticides and fungicides resulted in poor weight gain and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage in the worms. Pesticide treatment can be introduced at several different ...

Discovery of a subset of human short introns that are spliced out by a novel mechanism

Discovery of a subset of human short introns that are spliced out by a novel mechanism
2024-02-14
In humans, the length of pre-mRNA varies extensively (from 30 to 1,160,411 nucleotides by recent studies). The fundamental mechanism of splicing has been studied with model pre-mRNAs including 158- and 231-nt introns, for historical instance, that are spliced very efficiently in vitro and in vivo. Such an ideal pre-mRNA contains good splicing signal sequences, i.e., the 5′ splice site, the branch-site (BS) sequence, and the polypyrimidine tract (PPT) followed by the 3′ splice site that are recognized by U1 snRNP, U2 snRNP and U2AF2–U2AF1, respectively. Prof. Mayeda says, “Given the diverse lengths ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

People prefer to work with higher-paid colleagues

Deeper corals may help shallow reefs recover in the Florida keys

Why saying you’ll ‘never retire’ may be a warning sign

Study reveals high rates of seafood mislabeling and ambiguous market names in Calgary, Alberta, highlighting species of conservation concern

COVID-19 hits older adults hardest; which ones want the updated vaccine?

Mental health issues are a common phenomenon in elite sport

New insights into intellectual disability genetics emerge at Mount Sinai

Older people are more swayed by the impulsive actions of others when making financial decisions – new study reveals

Leading scientists redefine ‘sustainability’ to save the ocean and feed a hungry and warming planet

Experts discover the deadly genetics of cholera, which could be key to its prevention

How remarkable diversity in heat tolerance can help protect coral reefs

Most new recessive developmental disorder diagnoses lie within known genes

Compact “gene scissor” enables effective genome editing

New report: Nvidia is going for quality not quantity with AI chip patents

Do cancer and cancer-related treatments increase cardiovascular disease risk in older cancer survivors?

Artificial intelligence helps produce clean water

Drug overdose more likely in patients who leave hospital against medical advice

Mark your calendars: Insect science takes center stage in Phoenix, November 10–13

Study shows alcohol-dependent men and women have different biochemistries, so may need different treatments

Researchers find that Antidepressants may improve brain function

Aviation can achieve Net-Zero by 2050 if immediate action is taken, says University of Cambridge report

Study shows psychedelic drug psilocybin gives comparable long-term antidepressant effects to standard antidepressants, but may offer additional benefits

Study finds symptoms of depression during pregnancy linked to specific brain activity: scientists hope to develop test for “baby blues” risk

Sexual health symptoms may correlate with poor adherence to adjuvant endocrine therapy in Black women with breast cancer

Black patients with triple-negative breast cancer may be less likely to receive immunotherapy than white patients

Affordable care act may increase access to colon cancer care for underserved groups

UK study shows there is less stigma against LGBTQ people than you might think, but people with mental health problems continue to experience higher levels of stigma

Bringing lost proteins back home

Better than blood tests? Nanoparticle potential found for assessing kidneys

Texas A&M and partner USAging awarded 2024 Immunization Neighborhood Champion Award

[Press-News.org] New understanding of avian eggshell attachment – implications for medical procedures and egg industry