. Scientific Frontline

Sunday, September 11, 2022

Climate change is affecting drinking water quality

The Rappbode reservoir in the Harz region is surrounded by forests and is the largest drinking water reservoir in Germany.
Photo credit: André Künzelmann/UFZ

The water stored in reservoirs ensures our supply of drinking water. Good water quality is therefore important - but is at significant risk due to climate change. In a model study of the Rappbode reservoir in the Harz region, a research team from the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) demonstrated how the climate-related disappearance of forests in the catchment area for Germany's largest drinking water reservoir can affect water quality. The problem of such indirect consequences of climate change is seriously underestimated, the scientists warn in Water Research. Water quality is of critical importance, especially for drinking water reservoirs, as subsequent treatment in the waterworks must continually meet high standards.

Heat waves, drought, floods, forest fires - the consequences of climate change are increasing and are changing our environment. A prime example is the countryside in the catchment area for the Rappbode reservoir in the eastern Harz region. This is the largest drinking water reservoir in Germany and provides drinking water for roughly one million people. Long periods of drought over the years from 2015 to 2020 have so severely weakened the tree population in the Harz region that parasites such as bark beetles have been able to propagate. This further exacerbated the effect: The trees were further damaged and quickly died off. "Over the past four years, the Rappbode catchment area, characterized by conifers, primarily spruce, has lost over 50 percent of its forest," says UFZ hydrologist and last author Prof. Michael Rode. "This massive forest dieback is advancing rapidly and is dramatic. This will have consequences for the drinking water reservoir."

Researchers develop plastic film that can kill viruses using room lights

Credit: Queen's University Belfast

The self-sterilizing film is the first of its kind – it is low cost to produce, can be readily scaled and could be used for disposable aprons, tablecloths, and curtains in hospitals.

It is coated with a thin layer of particles that absorb UV light and produce reactive oxygen species – ROS. These kill viruses, including SARS2.

The technology used to create the film also ensures it is degradable - unlike the current disposable plastic films it would replace, which is much more environmentally friendly.

The breakthrough could lead to a significant reduction in the transmission of viruses in healthcare environments but also in other settings that use plastic films – for example, food production factories.

The Queen’s researchers tested the film for anti-viral activity using four different viruses – two strains of influenza A virus, a highly-stable picornavirus called EMCV and SARS2 – exposing it to either UVA radiation or with light from a cool white light fluorescent lamp.

They found that the film is effective at killing all of the viruses - even in a room lit with just white fluorescent tubes.

Friday, September 9, 2022

Vaccine expected to induce strong monkeypox virus immune response, research shows

An electron microscope image of monkeypox virus particles.
Credit: Dr Jason A. Roberts, Head of Electron Microscopy and Structural Virology at The Royal Melbourne Hospital's Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory, Doherty Institute.

New research suggests recommended vaccinia virus (VACV)-based vaccines will mount a robust immune response against the monkeypox virus observed in the current outbreak (MPXV-2022).

Since the new virus was first observed in early May 2022, over 52,000 cases have been confirmed in more than 90 countries, including Australia, where 124 cases have been diagnosed (confirmed and probable).

The study, co-led by University of Melbourne Professor Matthew McKay, ARC Future Fellow and Honorary Professor at the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, and Professor Ahmed Abdul Quadeer, Research Assistant Professor at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, was published in the international journal Viruses.

Weeks after the new strain emerged, the team undertook genomic research to find out if the genetic mutations observed in MPXV-2022 may affect vaccine-induced immune responses against monkeypox.

Scientists Create Mathematical Model for Nanoparticle and Virus Dynamics in Cells

Dmitry Aleksandrov and Sergey Fedotov (left to right) determined the behavior of viruses in cells.
 Photo credit: Ilya Safarov

Physicists and mathematicians at the Ural Federal University and the University of Manchester have for the first time created a complex mathematical model that calculates the distribution of nanoparticles (particularly viruses) in living cells. Using the mathematical model, scientists have figured out how nanoparticles cluster (merge into a single particle) inside cells, namely in cellular endosomes, which are responsible for sorting and transporting proteins and lipids.

These calculations will be useful for medical purposes because, on the one hand, they show how viruses behave when they enter cells and tend to replicate. On the other hand, the model allows the exact amount of medication needed for therapy to be as effective as possible and with minimal side effects. The scientists published the model description and calculation results in Crystals, Cancer Nanotechnology and Mathematics.

"The processes in cells are extremely complex, but in simple terms, viruses use different variants to reproduce. Some deliver genetic material directly into the cytoplasm. Others use the endocytosis pathway: they deliver the viral genome by releasing it from the endosomes. If viruses stay in the endosomes, the acidity increases there, and they die in the lysosomes. So, our model allowed us to find out, first of all, when and which viruses "escape" from endosomes in order to survive. For example, some influenza viruses are low-pH-dependent viruses; they fuse with the endosome membrane and release their genome into the cytoplasm. Secondly, we found out that it is easier for viruses to survive in endosomes during clustering, when two particles merge and tend to form a single particle," says Dmitry Aleksandrov, Head of the Multi-Scale Mathematical Modeling Laboratory at UrFU.

Circalunar clocks: using the right light

Moonlight plays an important role in synchronizing the reproductive cycles of marine life.
Credit Carolina Castro

How animals are able to interpret natural light sources to adjust their physiology and behavior is poorly understood. The labs of Kristin Tessmar-Raible (Max Perutz Labs Vienna, Alfred Wegener Institut, University of Oldenburg) and Eva Wolf (Johannes Gutenberg University and Institute of Molecular Biology Mainz) have now revealed that a molecule called L-cryptochrome (L-Cry) has the biochemical properties to discriminate between different moon phases, as well as between sun- and moonlight. Their findings, published in Nature Communications, show that L-Cry can interpret moonlight to entrain the monthly (circalunar) clock of a marine worm to control sexual maturation and reproduction.

Many marine organisms, including brown algae, fish, corals, turtles and bristle worms, synchronize their behavior and reproduction with the lunar cycle. For some species, such as the bristle worm Platynereiis dumerilii, lab experiments have shown that moonlight exerts its timing function by entraining an inner monthly calendar, also called circalunar clock. Under these laboratory conditions, mimicking the duration of the full moon is sufficient to entrain these circalunar clocks. However, in natural habitats light conditions can vary considerably. Even the regular interplay of sun- and moon creates highly complex patterns. Organisms using lunar light for their timing thus need to discriminate between specific moon phases and between sun and moonlight. This ability is not well understood. "We have now revealed that one light receptive molecule, called L-Cry, is able to discriminate between different light valences," says co-first author of the study, Birgit Poehn. This Cryptochrome thereby serves as a light sensor that is able to measure light intensity and duration, thus helping the animals to choose the "right" light to adequately adjust their monthly timing system.

A breakthrough discovery in carbon capture conversion for ethylene production

 Abstract illustration of atoms passing through water and an electrified membrane under a shining sun.
Credit: Meenesh Singh

A team of researchers led by Meenesh Singh at University of Illinois Chicago has discovered a way to convert 100% of carbon dioxide captured from industrial exhaust into ethylene, a key building block for plastic products.

Their findings are published in Cell Reports Physical Science.

While researchers have been exploring the possibility of converting carbon dioxide to ethylene for more than a decade, the UIC team’s approach is the first to achieve nearly 100% utilization of carbon dioxide to produce hydrocarbons. Their system uses electrolysis to transform captured carbon dioxide gas into high purity ethylene, with other carbon-based fuels and oxygen as byproducts.

The process can convert up to 6 metric tons of carbon dioxide into 1 metric ton of ethylene, recycling almost all carbon dioxide captured. Because the system runs on electricity, the use of renewable energy can make the process carbon negative.

According to Singh, his team’s approach surpasses the net-zero carbon goal of other carbon capture and conversion technologies by actually reducing the total carbon dioxide output from industry. “It’s a net negative,” he said. “For every 1 ton of ethylene produced, you’re taking 6 tons of CO2 from point sources that otherwise would be released to the atmosphere.”

Culprit behind mass extinction identified, motive remains unknown

Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab

About 183 million years ago tremendous volcanic eruptions occurred and lava deposits rivalling the size of continents covered Earth’s surface, causing mass extinctions and changing the ocean’s chemistry and global climates. What triggered this has been a mystery for the past 183 million years, but a new paper published in Science Advances offers a compelling explanation.

One of the paper’s co-authors, Ricardo L. Silva, an Assistant Professor in Paleoenvironmental Sedimentology in the University of Manitoba’s Department of Earth Sciences, explains that what likely enabled this catastrophic series of events was a slowing of the tectonic plates. In short, the team found the long-sought mechanism that links Earth’s interior and surficial processes and came up with an explanation for one of Earth’s major past global climate and mass extinction events.

“Imagine you’re using a pressure washer on the side of your house, but then you stop moving the spout and spray water in one place,” Silva says. “Eventually, you’ll bore a hole through your house. Now make a magma plume from deep inside the Earth the pressure washer and tectonic plates your house. That’s what happened. And when the magma bore through the plates, vast amounts of carbon dioxide were released, and when the magma heated the surrounding rocks, even more carbon was released.”

How a small, unassuming fish helps reveal gene adaptations

Jesse Weber collects stickleback with a minnow trap in the Kenai Peninsula of Alaska
Credit: Matt Chotlos

At first blush, sticklebacks might seem a bit pedestrian. The finger-length, unassuming fish with a few small dorsal spines are a ubiquitous presence in oceans and coastal watersheds around the northern hemisphere. But these small creatures are also an excellent subject for investigating the complex dance of evolutionary adaptations.

A new study published in Science sheds light on the genetic basis by which stickleback populations inhabiting ecosystems near each other developed a strong immune response to tapeworm infections, and how some populations later came to tolerate the parasites.

Evolutionary biologist Jesse Weber, a professor of integrative biology at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, is one of the study’s lead authors. Sticklebacks have long been a source of fascination not only for Weber, but for biologists all over the world — so much so that the fish are among the most closely studied species.

“We arguably know more about stickleback ecology and evolution than any other vertebrate,” says Weber.

This is in part because of sticklebacks’ rich abundance in places like Western Europe, where the fish have long been involved in biological study, Weber says. But the reasons for the species’ star status go well beyond happenstance.

New Technology Can Efficiently Extract Non-Ferrous Metal from Batteries

The decomposition time of discarded nutrients can exceed 100 years.
Photo Credit: Unsplash.com / John Cameron

Scientists at Ural Federal University have developed a technology for extracting non-ferrous metals from spent zinc-manganese batteries. The zinc and manganese extracted in this way can be used in metallurgy and sent to production as raw materials. The technology is a closed cycle and can be easily implemented at existing metallurgical plants. A description of the technology and experimental results are presented in the Russian Journal of Non-Ferrous Metals.

Zinc-manganese batteries, specifically salt and alkaline batteries, are ubiquitous in everyday life, such as in remote controls, wireless computer mice, keyboards, clocks, and other devices. Recycling of such batteries is topical for obtaining zinc and especially manganese, since the latter is not produced in metallic form in Russia. The recovered zinc can be used as a reducing agent for gold in the process of its deep cleaning from impurities. Manganese can be used in steel production as an alloying element or a deoxidizer, in other words for removing dissolved oxygen from the metal.

"In Russia about 1 billion zinc-manganese batteries are accumulated as waste, and no more than 3% of them are recycled. The accumulation of batteries in landfills is dangerous because they can spontaneously ignite. Burning batteries release dioxins into the atmosphere as toxic substances that have mutagenic, immunosuppressant and carcinogenic effects. Thus, our team solves two problems: caring for the environment and people's health, as well as the possibility of useful use of metals," says Elvira Kolmachikhina, Associate Professor of the Department of Non-Ferrous Metallurgy at Ural Federal University.

New AI system predicts how to prevent wildfires

Satellite image of Borneo in 2006 covered by smoke from fires (marked by red dots).
Image Credit: Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team / NASA

A machine learning model can evaluate the effectiveness of different management strategies

Wildfires are a growing threat in a world shaped by climate change. Now, researchers at Aalto University have developed a neural network model that can accurately predict the occurrence of fires in peatlands. They used the new model to assess the effect of different strategies for managing fire risk and identified a suite of interventions that would reduce fire incidence by 50-76%.

The study focused on the Central Kalimantan province of Borneo in Indonesia, which has the highest density of peatland fires in Southeast Asia. Drainage to support agriculture or residential expansion has made peatlands increasingly vulnerable to recurring fires. In addition to threatening lives and livelihoods, peatland fires release significant amounts of carbon dioxide. However, prevention strategies have faced difficulties because of the lack of clear, quantified links between proposed interventions and fire risk.

The new model uses measurements taken before each fire season in 2002-2019 to predict the distribution of peatland fires. While the findings can be broadly applied to peatlands elsewhere, a new analysis would have to be done for other contexts. ‘Our methodology could be used for other contexts, but this specific model would have to be re-trained on the new data,’ says Alexander Horton, the postdoctoral researcher who carried out study.

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