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

Receptors in mammary glands make livestock and humans inviting hosts for avian flu

2025-12-09
(Press-News.org) AMES, Iowa – An ongoing outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza has affected more than 184 million domestic poultry since 2022 and, since making the leap to dairy cattle in spring 2024, more than 1,000 milking cow herds.

A new study led by Iowa State University researchers shows that the mammary glands of several other production animals – including pigs, sheep, goats, beef cattle and alpacas – are biologically suitable to harbor avian influenza, due to high levels of sialic acids.

“The main thing we wanted to understand in this study is whether there is potential for transmission among these other domestic mammals and humans, and it looks like there is,” said Rahul Nelli, the study’s lead author and a research assistant professor of veterinary diagnostic and production animal medicine.

Sialic acid, a sugar molecule found on the surface of many types of animal cells, provides an influenza virus the microscopic docking station it needs to infect a host cell, an entry point for attaching and invading. A study by many of the same researchers last year found that dairy cattle udders have high levels of sialic acid, which helped explain why the H5N1 avian influenza outbreak was able to spread rapidly among dairy herds.

In the study published Nov. 27 in the Journal of Dairy Science, a research team that includes scientists from the ISU College of Veterinary Medicine and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Animal Disease Center in Ames also found the same receptors in the mammary glands of the humans.

Only a few sporadic cases of H5N1 infection have been reported in the animals examined in the new study, but those species aren’t being tested on a widespread basis, said Dr. Todd Bell, professor of veterinary pathology and a study co-author.

“If we don’t look, we don’t know,” Bell said.

In dairy herds, H5N1 infections are causing sick cows to produce milk contaminated with the virus, prompting nationwide surveillance testing of raw cow milk samples by the USDA. Pasteurization kills influenza viruses, so store-bought milk is safe. But concerns about raw milk should extend to other mammalian livestock, Nelli said.

“Some people do consume the raw milk of these other animals,” he said.

The presence of the virus in milk from infected cows has likely played a role in the H5N1 spreading and makes transmission to humans a bigger risk, Nelli said.

“If a virus in livestock is being spread by respiratory infections, few humans will be in close enough contact to catch it. But milk is an entirely different situation because it’s transported into communities,” he said. 

All of the mammary gland tissues examined in the new study had sialic acid receptors preferred by both avian influenza and the seasonal influenza that circulates more readily among humans. The possibility of both types of viruses comingling and transmitting between different species heightens concerns about more dangerous adaptations emerging, Bell said. H5N1 has in the past had a fatality rate in humans of around 50%, though the 71 confirmed human infections during the current outbreak have led to just two deaths.

“We need to try to stay ahead of this so it doesn’t have a chance to continue to replicate and potentially evolve into something even more troublesome,” he said.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Icy hot plasmas

2025-12-09
When a gas is highly energized, its electrons get torn from the parent atoms, resulting in a plasma—the oft-forgotten fourth state of matter (along with solid, liquid, and gas). When we think of plasmas, we normally think of extremely hot phenomena such as the Sun, lightning, or maybe arc welding, but there are situations in which icy cold particles are associated with plasmas. Images of distant molecular clouds from the James Webb Space Telescope feature such hot–cold interactions, with frozen dust illuminated by pockets of shocked gas and newborn stars. Now a team of Caltech researchers has managed to recreate such ...

Treating adults with autism: Maryland Clinical Center offers national blueprint for care after pediatric transition

2025-12-09
Adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and other neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) often lose access to specialized care once they age out of pediatric services. A new report from the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) faculty presents five years of real-world data from their clinical practice at the Clinical Center for Adults with Neurodevelopmental Disorders (CCAND), demonstrating how a state-funded, multidisciplinary care model can close these gaps and serve as a blueprint for other states. The findings were recently published in the journal Neurology. “We felt it was vital to provide a practical roadmap ...

University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies releases white paper on reclaiming control to build workforce resilience

2025-12-09
University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies announced the publication of “Reclaiming Control: Autonomy as the Key to Workforce Resilience and Career Optimism,” a new white paper by Karen Johnson, Ed.D. The report argues that restoring a sense of autonomy is essential to reducing record-high burnout and strengthening organizational resilience.   Drawing on findings from several years of the University’s Career Optimism Index® study, Johnson highlights an “autonomy crisis” in the U.S. workforce: 21% of workers say their control over their professional future has declined, while 51% report burnout—the highest level since tracking ...

NCCN Summit seeks to improve care for veterans and first responders with cancer from line-of-duty exposure

2025-12-09
WASHINGTON, D.C. [December 9, 2025] — The National Comprehensive Cancer Network® (NCCN®)—an alliance of leading cancer centers—hosted a Patient Advocacy Summit on the unique cancer needs of veterans and first responders. It featured a fireside chat from Representative Mariannette Miller-Meeks, MD, MS (IA-01), a physician and veteran of the U.S. Army. The program also brought together a diverse group of experts to discuss how veterans, firefighters, and other national heroes face elevated cancer risk on the job, what policies and programs are in place currently to help ...

ERC Consolidator Grant for soft robotics researcher

2025-12-09
Whether artificial hands with an especially gentle touch or an endoscope that crawls through the intestines like a worm, robots made of soft materials could soon carry out tasks that are difficult for metal-based systems. Dr. Philipp Rothemund, assistant professor at the University of Stuttgart, seeks to simplify how soft robots are controlled. The European Research Council (ERC) is funding the project with one of its prestigious Consolidator Grants worth up to €2 million. “I would like to congratulate Philipp Rothemund on this award. Soft ...

Dual-action arts and wellbeing program transforms dementia care

2025-12-09
A new arts and wellbeing program co-developed by the University of South Australia, Flinders University and the University of Adelaide shows that supporting the social needs of people living with dementia and their carers can help families rediscover connection, confidence and a sense of community.   Designed in collaboration with those affected by dementia and funded by the Global Arts and Health Alliance, the six-week program concurrently delivers an arts session for people with dementia alongside a wellbeing session for their carers.   UniSA ...

The global plastic waste trade contributes to coastal litter in importing countries, study shows

2025-12-09
URBANA, Ill. – The ubiquitous plastic beverage bottle makes up about half of plastic waste collected for recycling in the U.S. Most recycled plastic is processed domestically, but a portion is traded overseas. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign draws on citizen science data to investigate how the global plastic waste trade contributes to litter along coastlines and waterways in importing countries. “There has been a lot of news coverage about the plastic waste ...

UT Dallas partners with Tech Mahindra on AI innovation

2025-12-09
The University of Texas at Dallas has partnered with Tech Mahindra, a leading provider of technology consulting and digital solutions to enterprises across industries, to collaborate on artificial intelligence (AI) innovation, skill development and research. UT Dallas has signed a memorandum of understanding with Tech Mahindra to facilitate collaboration with the India-based company, which opened its headquarters in the Americas in March in Plano, Texas. Tech Mahindra will launch its first Makers Lab in the U.S. in Dallas, providing opportunities for undergraduates, master’s and doctoral students, and faculty to advance AI technologies, data science, quantum computing, cybersecurity ...

Blinking less could signal the brain is working harder to listen, Concordia study shows

2025-12-09
Blinking is a human reflex most often performed without thinking, like breathing. Although research on blinking is usually related to vision, a new Concordia study examines how blinking is connected to cognitive function such as filtering out background noise to focus on what someone is trying to say to us in a crowded room. Writing in the journal Trends in Hearing, the researchers describe two experiments designed to measure how eye blinking changes in response to stimuli under different conditions. They found that people naturally blink less when they are working harder to understand ...

Male bonobos track females’ reproductive cycle to maximize mating success

2025-12-09
Male bonobos can decipher females’ unreliable fertility signals, allowing them to focus their efforts on matings with the highest chance of conception, according to a study by Heungjin Ryu at Kyoto University, Japan, and colleagues publishing December 9th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology. In most mammals, females are only receptive to mating during ovulation, allowing males to time their mating efforts to maximize the chances of conception. But in some primates, such as bonobos (Pan paniscus), females become sexually receptive and display a conspicuous pink swelling around the genitals for a prolonged period of time. To investigate how males ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

To reach net-zero, reverse current policy and protect largest trees in Amazon, urge scientists

Double trouble: Tobacco use and Long COVID

Eating a plant-forward diet is good for your kidneys

Elucidating liquid-liquid phase separation under non-equilibrium conditions

Fecal microbiome and bile acid profiles differ in preterm infants with parenteral nutrition-associated cholestasis

The Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) receives €5 million donation for AI research

Study finds link between colorblindness and death from bladder cancer

Tailored treatment approach shows promise for reducing suicide and self-harm risk in teens and young adults

Call for papers: AI in biochar research for sustainable land ecosystems

Methane eating microbes turn a powerful greenhouse gas into green plastics, feed, and fuel

Hidden nitrogen in China’s rice paddies could cut fertilizer use

Texas A&M researchers expose hidden risks of firefighter gear in an effort to improve safety and performance

Wood burning in homes drives dangerous air pollution in winter

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: January 23, 2026

ISSCR statement in response to new NIH policy on research using human fetal tissue (Notice NOT-OD-26-028)

Biologists and engineers follow goopy clues to plant-wilting bacteria

What do rats remember? IU research pushes the boundaries on what animal models can tell us about human memory

Frontiers Science House: did you miss it? Fresh stories from Davos – end of week wrap

Watching forests grow from space

New grounded theory reveals why hybrid delivery systems work the way they do

CDI scientist joins NIH group to improve post-stem cell transplant patient evaluation

Uncovering cancer's hidden oncRNA signatures: From discovery to liquid biopsy

Multiple maternal chronic conditions and risk of severe neonatal morbidity and mortality

Interactive virtual assistant for health promotion among older adults with type 2 diabetes

Ion accumulation in liquid–liquid phase separation regulates biomolecule localization

Hemispheric asymmetry in the genetic overlap between schizophrenia and white matter microstructure

Research Article | Evaluation of ten satellite-based and reanalysis precipitation datasets on a daily basis for Czechia (2001–2021)

Nano-immunotherapy synergizing ferroptosis and STING activation in metastatic bladder cancer

Insilico Medicine receives IND approval from FDA for ISM8969, an AI-empowered potential best-in-class NLRP3 inhibitor

Combined aerobic-resistance exercise: Dual efficacy and efficiency for hepatic steatosis

[Press-News.org] Receptors in mammary glands make livestock and humans inviting hosts for avian flu