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Human vaginal microbiome is shaped by competition for resources

2026-02-03
The vaginal microbiota is shaped by bacterial access to specific nutritional resources, influencing health outcomes. This study uses a resource-based model supported by clinical data to identify key ecological mechanisms underlying microbiota composition and potential bacterial vaginosis interventions.   In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Biology: https://plos.io/4qaZ2kt  Article title: Resource landscape shapes the composition and stability of the human vaginal microbiota Author countries: France, United States Funding: Research reported in this publication was supported by the Fondation pour ...

Test strip breakthrough for accessible diagnosis

2026-02-03
A research team led by La Trobe University has developed a single-use test strip which could ultimately change how diseases like cancer are diagnosed.   The research, published in the journal Small, used enzymes to boost an electrical signal to detect disease-indicative molecules, also known as microRNAs.   The biosensor works in a similar way to glucose test strips but senior researcher Dr Saimon Moraes Silva said it was much more sensitive, detecting microRNAs in blood plasma at ultra-low concentrations ...

George Coukos appointed director of new Ludwig Laboratory for Cell Therapy

2026-02-03
FEBRUARY 2, 2026, NEW YORK – It is with great pleasure that we announce that the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research has established the Ludwig Laboratory for Cell Therapy at Weill Cornell Medicine’s Sandra and Edward Meyer Cancer Center. The laboratory is directed by former Ludwig Lausanne Director George Coukos, a physician-scientist and global authority on tumor immunology and cellular immunotherapy. Coukos returns to the U.S. following an extraordinarily productive tenure over the past decade as the founding director of the current Lausanne Branch and of the Department of ...

SCAI expert opinion explores ‘wire-free’ angiography-derived physiology for coronary assessment

2026-02-03
WASHINGTON—A new expert opinion from the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography & Interventions (SCAI) examines the evolving role of angiography-derived physiology (ADP), a wire-free method for coronary physiologic assessment that applies computational modeling or artificial intelligence (AI) to standard coronary angiographic images for the assessment and management of coronary artery disease.  Published in JSCAI, “Angiography-Derived Physiology for Coronary Artery Disease Assessment: Expert Opinion from ...

‘Masculinity crisis’: Influencers on social media promote low testosterone to young men, study finds

2026-02-03
Young men are being encouraged to undergo testosterone testing and start hormone therapy through Instagram and TikTok content that promotes unproven health claims while downplaying medical risks, a new international study has found.     The study was done at the University of Sydney’s Faculty of Medicine and Health, and led by Emma Grundtvig Gram, a visiting PhD student from the University of Copenhagen. It found that influencer marketing on social media is normalising unnecessary testosterone testing ...

Pensoft and ARPHA integrate Prophy to speed up reviewer discovery across 90+ scholarly journals

2026-02-03
In a new partnership between open-access scholarly publisher Pensoft and the AI-driven reviewer discovery system provider Prophy, the editorial teams at all journals hosted on the publisher’s ARPHA Platform receive access to a broader and more diverse global pool of researchers.  The integration connects ARPHA’s editorial and peer review workflows with Prophy’s continuously updated database of millions of active, qualified researchers. As a result, editorial teams across more than 90 open-access peer-reviewed journals powered by ARPHA can now opt to enjoy data-driven reviewer recommendations based on structured analysis ...

Accurately predicting Arctic sea ice in real time

2026-02-03
WASHINGTON, Feb. 3, 2026 — Arctic sea ice has large effects on the global climate. By cooling the planet, Arctic ice impacts ocean circulation, atmospheric patterns, and extreme weather conditions, even outside the Arctic region. However, climate change has led to its rapid decline, and being able to make real-time predictions of sea ice extent (SIE) — the area of water with a minimum concentration of sea ice — has become crucial for monitoring sea ice health. In Chaos, by AIP Publishing, researchers from the United States and the ...

A hearing test for the world’s rarest sea turtle

2026-02-03
WASHINGTON, Feb. 3, 2026 — Kemp’s ridley sea turtles are among the most endangered species of sea turtles in the world. They reside along the east and Gulf coasts of North America, alongside some of the world’s most active shipping lanes. While the threats from fishing, pollution, and vessel collisions are well understood, it is less clear how disruptive human-caused noise is to their survival. In JASA, published on behalf of the Acoustical Society of America by AIP Publishing, researchers from Duke University Marine Laboratory, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and North Carolina State University evaluated ...

Estimated effectiveness of 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccination against severe COVID-19

2026-02-03
About The Study: This multicenter, case-control study found that the vaccine effectiveness of 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccines was associated with protection against COVID-19 hospitalization and severe in-hospital outcomes and against multiple JN.1 descendants. Monitoring COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness, including stratifying by SARS-CoV-2 lineage and spike protein mutations, remains important to guide COVID-19 vaccine composition and recommendations. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Kevin C. Ma, PhD, email tra3@cdc.gov. To ...

Risk of cardiorespiratory events following RSV–related hospitalization

2026-02-03
About The Study: This study demonstrated that respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), similar to influenza and SARSCoV-2, was associated with an increased risk of cardiorespiratory events 2 weeks following RSV-related hospitalization, and some conditions had significant risk elevations up to 180 days after admission. The findings reinforce the need to increase RSV immunization in adults. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Caihua Liang, MD, PhD, email caihua.liang@pfizer.com. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.56767) Editor’s ...

Socioeconomic status and postpartum depression risk by state trigger laws after dobbs

2026-02-03
About The Study: In this cohort study, state-level abortion bans following Dobbs were associated with a disproportionate increase in the risk of postpartum depression among women and adolescents in low- socioeconomic status communities. These findings underscore the need for targeted mental health support and policy interventions to mitigate the unequal burden of such legislation on vulnerable populations. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Onur Baser, MA, MS, PhD, email onur.baser@sph.cuny.edu. To access the embargoed study: ...

Shared purpose outperforms specialization, new study shows

2026-02-03
A new study published in the Strategic Management Journal challenges long-standing assumptions about managerial specialization by examining when organizations perform better by having leaders collectively pursue multiple objectives rather than dividing responsibilities among them. Addressing the growing complexity of modern organizations—where financial, social, environmental, and technological goals increasingly coexist—the research introduces what the authors call the “common purpose advantage.” Drawing on a computational model of multi-manager firms, the study compares performance under two approaches: “objective ...

Dr. Barron Bichon promoted to vice president of SwRI’s Mechanical Engineering Division

2026-02-03
SAN ANTONIO — February 3, 2026 — Dr. Barron Bichon has been promoted to vice president of SwRI’s Mechanical Engineering Division. He previously served as the director of SwRI’s Materials Engineering Department. As vice president, Bichon will lead more than 400 staff members performing research, development, testing and evaluation for a wide variety of projects. “I’m excited for the opportunity to lead our division as it continues to dedicate itself to innovation, collaboration and real-world impact,” Bichon said. “Leading this incredible team is ...

Risk for Lyme disease in Ohio is equal to Connecticut, study shows

2026-02-03
COLUMBUS, Ohio – The risk for being bitten by a tick infected with bacteria that cause Lyme disease is as high in Ohio as it is for those living in Northeast states that have dealt with Lyme disease for over 50 years, according to a new study. Researchers followed up on a 2014 study finding that Ohio’s first established population of blacklegged ticks, carriers of the bacteria that cause Lyme disease, had been detected in 2010 in Coshocton County. At that time, the infectious bacteria were detected in 2.4% of collected blacklegged ticks and antibodies indicating prior exposure to the pathogen were detected in 20% of white-footed mice, ...

Korea University College of Medicine Physician-Scientist Training Program hosts International Symposium and Inauguration Ceremony

2026-02-03
Korea University College of Medicine (Dean Seong Bom Pyun) successfully hosted the inaugural Korea University Medical Scientist Training Program (KU-MSTP) International Symposium and Inauguration Ceremony on Friday, November 21, marking a significant milestone in nurturing future physician-scientist leaders who will shape the next generation of medicine. Through this event, the College formally launched a comprehensive physician-scientist training system that bridges basic science and clinical practice ...

Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation survey finds 93% of IBD community supports predictive testing and prevention strategies

2026-02-03
Embargoed until Tuesday February 3 @ 9am EST Contact: Rachel Peifer rpeifer@crohnscolitisfoundation.org Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation Survey Finds 93% of IBD Community Supports Predictive Testing and Prevention Strategies Study underscores the importance of integrating patient and family perspectives into emerging IBD prevention frameworks, like models used in type 1 diabetes NEW YORK, NY (January 13, 2026) — A new Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation–led survey of more than 1,500 people living with or at risk for inflammatory ...

New therapy could make life better for kidney transplant patients

2026-02-03
A new study offers hope that kidney transplant patients could one day have a monthly treatment instead of multiple pills every day. The new treatment also may reduce side effects and increase the lifespan of the donor organ.  Currently, patients who have had a kidney transplant must take a cocktail of pills every day for the rest of their lives. These standard immunosuppressants prevent the immune system from attacking the new organ, but over time may damage kidney function and become less effective.  Standard immunosuppressants also are associated with diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, and cause side effects that lead most transplant ...

Shrinking shellfish? FAU study uncovers acidic water risks in Indian River lagoon

2026-02-03
Florida’s Indian River Lagoon (IRL), one of the state’s most ecologically productive estuaries, is facing a growing but invisible threat that could reshape its marine ecosystems. Over the past decade, the lagoon has suffered severe degradation caused by nutrient pollution, excessive freshwater runoff, harmful algal blooms (HABs), and declining water quality. These changes have led to the loss of tens of thousands of acres of seagrass and have negatively impacted shellfish, fish, dolphins, manatees and other key species. A new study from Florida Atlantic University’s ...

CT scans unwrap secrets of ancient Egyptian life

2026-02-03
Photos and b-roll package available for download here. LOS ANGELES — Keck Medicine of USC radiologists use computed tomography (CT) scanners to diagnose and treat patients’ diseases and injuries.   Recently, however, this advanced technology was put to a far more novel use: examining the bodies of two ancient Egyptian mummies.  Radiologists conducted full-body CT scans of two Egyptian priests, Nes-Min, circa 330 BCE, and Nes-Hor, circa 190 BCE, whose bodies had been preserved for more than 2,200 years.   The ...

Clinical data gaps keeping life-saving antibiotics from children

2026-02-03
Life-saving antibiotics that could treat severe infections in babies and children aren’t accessible due to a lack of data around safety and dosage, new research shows. Two wide sweeping reviews, led by Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI) and the Australasian KIDS DOSE consortium, have discovered the barriers children are experiencing in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific Islands when accessing treatment for the antimicrobial resistant (AMR) infections deemed the highest priority by the World Health Organization. The ...

For people with traumatic brain injury and their caregivers, recovery of basic communication is an “acceptable” outcome

2026-02-03
A federally funded study of more than 500 people living with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and their caregivers, co-led by researchers at Mass General Brigham, found that survey participants viewed the ability to regain basic communication as the minimum acceptable outcome after severe brain injury. The study, published in Critical Care Medicine, shows that many individuals living with TBIs consider outcomes involving significant disability to be acceptable. These results challenge longstanding assumptions by TBI researchers ...

Insilico Medicine receives USD 5 million milestone payment from Menarini Group following First-in-Human (FIH) achievement for MEN2501

2026-02-03
Insilico Medicine (“Insilico”), a clinical-stage, generative artificial intelligence (AI)-driven biotechnology company, today announced that it has received USD 5 million from Menarini Group (“Menarini”) as an additional milestone payment, following the completion of first-in-patient dosing in a Phase 1 study of MEN2501, whose license-out agreement with Menarini was disclosed in January 2025. MEN2501 (previously known as ISM9682) is a highly differentiated small molecule inhibitor of kinesin KIF18A motor protein with potent activity in ...

Oxygen-modified graphene filters boost natural gas purification

2026-02-03
As we shift toward more sustainable fuels, natural gas and biogas, which mainly contain methane (CH4), have become important sources of energy and raw materials for chemical production. However, these gases also contain impurities that must be removed before use. One major contaminant is carbon dioxide (CO2), which reduces the energy content of the gas and can cause corrosion in pipelines. One promising method for efficiently separating CO2 from these gases is filtration using graphene membranes containing ...

A new thermoelectric material to convert waste heat to electricity

2026-02-03
Thermoelectric conversion devices offer a promising route for sustainable heat-to-energy conversion. They are particularly attractive for recovering energy from waste heat, such as that produced by conventional fossil fuel-based engines, improving their overall energy efficiency. Around 20–50% of the input energy is lost as waste heat in industries. This could be used as source by thermoelectric conversion devices. These devices also have the potential to enable portable power generation, for example, to run small sensors in remote locations. Currently, most thermoelectric devices rely on the longitudinal thermoelectric effect in which electricity ...

Restricting mothers' migration: New evidence on children’s health and education

2026-02-03
International labor migration plays a vital role in supporting families across low- and middle-income countries, often providing a critical source of income for families back home. However, when mothers migrate abroad for work, young children may be left without steady parental care during important developmental stages. While this concern is widely discussed, there has been limited real-world evidence showing how policies that restrict maternal migration affect children’s outcomes.   A new study made available online ...
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