. Scientific Frontline

Monday, October 13, 2025

New research reveals the secret to ancient fish scales’ survival

Diplomystus dentatus, Fossil-Lake, Wyoming, USA
Photo Credit: Didier Descouens
(CC BY-SA 4.0)

A Curtin University-led international study has solved the mystery of how the skin of a fossilized fish was able to be preserved for 52 million years, extending our understanding of how even the most delicate of biological material can survive deep in time.

Published in Environmental Microbiology, the research examined a remarkably well-preserved specimen of Diplomystus dentatus complete with fossilized skin and scales, found in the ‘Fossil Basin’ region of Wyoming in the United States of America.

Despite being in an oxygen elevated micro-environment which would normally cause tissues to decay, the team discovered the initial degradation of the fish’s fatty skin also led to an environment where phosphate minerals could form and rapidly replace organic material – leading to fossilization.

As the skin broke down, it released fatty acids and hydrogen ions, altering the surrounding chemistry in a way that favored phosphate preservation by effectively blocking the usual carbonate deposits which would have otherwise caused the tissues to decay.

A new system can dial expression of synthetic genes up or down

MIT engineers developed a way to set gene expression levels at off, low, or high. Using skin cells, the researchers delivered a cocktail (labeled with a red fluorescent protein, top row) that boosts the conversion of skin cells into motor neurons. Via promoter editing, they show that higher levels of this cocktail increase the number of motor neurons (green). In the bottom row, the same cells are labeled with a green fluorescent protein that is generated after the cells convert to motor neurons.
Image Credit: Courtesy of the researchers
(CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

For decades, synthetic biologists have been developing gene circuits that can be transferred into cells for applications such as reprogramming a stem cell into a neuron or generating a protein that could help treat a disease such as fragile X syndrome.

These gene circuits are typically delivered into cells by carriers such as nonpathogenic viruses. However, it has been difficult to ensure that these cells end up producing the correct amount of the protein encoded by the synthetic gene.

To overcome that obstacle, MIT engineers have designed a new control mechanism that allows them to establish a desired protein level, or set point, for any gene circuit. This approach also allows them to edit the set point after the circuit is delivered.

“This is a really stable and multifunctional tool. The tool is very modular, so there are a lot of transgenes you could control with this system,” says Katie Galloway, an assistant professor in Chemical Engineering at MIT and the senior author of the new study.

Deciphering the mechanisms of genome size evolution

The sequencing of the genomes of a spider from the mainland (Dysdera catalonica, left) and one from the Canary Islands (Dysdera tilosensis, left) opens a new perspective for understanding how genome size evolves in similar species, an enigma that has baffled the scientific community for years.
Photo Credit: Courtesy of University of Barcelona

This study contradicts the more traditional evolutionary view — on island-colonizing species, whose genomes are larger and often have more repetitive elements — and expands the scientific debate on a major puzzle in evolutionary biology: how and why does genome size change during the evolution of living beings?

The study is led by Julio Rozas and Sara Guirao, experts from the Faculty of Biology and the Biodiversity Research Institute (IRBio) of the University of Barcelona. The paper, whose first author is Vadim Pisarenco (UB-IRBio), also involves teams from the University of La Laguna, the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and the University of Neuchâtel (Switzerland).

This research offers a surprising perspective to explain a phenomenon that has puzzled scientists for decades: the size of the genome — the total number of DNA base pairs encoding an organism’s genetic information — varies enormously between species, even those with similar biological complexity.

The Red Sea Went Completely Dry Before Being Flooded by the Indian Ocean

 KAUST scientists have determined a rapid flood more than 6 million years ago radically changed the Red Sea and all its marine life.
Photo Credit: Francesco Ungaro

KAUST researchers find the Red Sea experienced a massive disruption 6.2 million years ago completely changing its marine life 

Scientists at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) have provided conclusive evidence that the Red Sea completely dried out about 6.2 million years ago, before being suddenly refilled by a catastrophic flood from the Indian Ocean. The findings, published in Communications Earth & Environment, put a definitive time on a dramatic event that changed the Red Sea. 

Using seismic imaging, microfossil evidence, and geochemical dating techniques, the KAUST researchers showed that a massive change happened in about 100 000 years – a blink of an eye for a major geological event. The Red Sea went from connecting with the Mediterranean Sea to an empty, salt-filled basin. Then, a massive flood burst through volcanic barriers to open the Bab el-Mandab strait and reconnect the Red Sea with the world’s oceans. 

“Our findings show that the Red Sea basin records one of the most extreme environmental events on Earth, when it dried out completely and was then suddenly reflooded about 6.2 million years ago,” said lead author Dr. Tihana Pensa of KAUST. “The flood transformed the basin, restored marine conditions, and established the Red Sea’s lasting connection to the Indian Ocean.” 

Sunday, October 12, 2025

ClipClip: The Clipboard Manager


For those who frequently find themselves copying and pasting text, images, and files, a clipboard manager can be an invaluable tool. ClipClip, a free clipboard management software for Windows, promises to take the simple copy-paste function to a whole new level.  This is closest clipboard manger you'll find to the old beloved "ClipMate."

Key Features

ClipClip is more than just a clipboard history tool. It offers a suite of features designed to enhance productivity:

XYplorer


XYplorer is a hybrid file manager for Microsoft Windows that combines features of both navigational (like Windows Explorer) and orthodox (like Norton Commander) file managers. It is designed for power users who find the native Windows File Explorer to be limiting. Its core value propositions are speed, a powerful feature set, extreme customizability, and full portability. It operates as a standalone application, requiring no installation and leaving no trace on the host system.


Target Audience: System administrators, developers, data managers, researchers, and any advanced user who manages a large number of files and requires efficiency, powerful search capabilities, and automation.

Saturday, October 11, 2025

What Is: El Niño, La Niña, and a Climate in Flux

Image Credit: Scientific Frontline / NOAA

The Planet's Most Powerful Climate Cycle

In 1997, a climatic event of unprecedented scale began to unfold in the tropical Pacific Ocean. Dubbed the "El Niño of the century," it triggered a cascade of extreme weather that reshaped global patterns for over a year. It unleashed devastating floods and droughts, sparked massive forest fires, decimated marine ecosystems, and crippled national economies. By the time it subsided in 1998, the event was estimated to have caused more than 22,000 deaths and inflicted over $36 billion in damages worldwide. Nearly two decades later, the powerful 2015-16 El Niño, supercharged by a background of long-term global warming, helped propel 2016 to become the hottest year on record and directly impacted the lives and livelihoods of over 60 million people.

These catastrophic events are not random acts of nature but manifestations of the planet's most powerful and influential climate cycle: the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). This naturally occurring phenomenon is a periodic, irregular fluctuation of sea surface temperatures and atmospheric pressure across the vast expanse of the equatorial Pacific Ocean. At its heart are two opposing phases: El Niño ("The Little Boy" in Spanish), a significant warming of the ocean surface, and La Niña ("The Little Girl"), a countervailing cooling. Together with a neutral "in-between" state, they form a planetary-scale pendulum that swings irregularly every two to seven years, dictating patterns of drought and flood, storm and calm, across the globe.

New technique detects genetic mutations in brain tumors during surgery within just 25 minutes

During neurosurgery at Nagoya University Hospital
Photo Credit: Department of Neurosurgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya University

A research team in Japan has developed an innovative system that can accurately detect genetic mutations in the brain tumor within just 25 minutes. Genetic mutations are crucial markers for diagnosis of brain tumors.

Unlike conventional genetic analysis methods, which typically take one to two days to obtain results, this new system allows surgeons to identify genotyping of brain tumors and determine optimal resection margins during surgery.

The new system succeeded in detecting mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) and telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) promoters. These mutations are key markers for diagnosis of diffuse glioma—the most common type of brain tumor—which exhibit highly infiltrative nature. The findings were published in the journal Neuro-Oncology.

New Insights into the Molecular Basis of Ataxia

The Bochum researchers Pauline Bohne (left) and Melanie Mark
Photo Credit: © RUB, Kramer

People with ataxia often experience stress-induced motor incoordination. Researchers have now discovered which receptor is responsible for this.

Researchers at Ruhr University Bochum, Germany, identified a receptor that plays a crucial role in stress-induced motor incoordination associated with ataxias. These hereditary motor disorders have long been linked to the neurotransmitter norepinephrine. The team, led by Dr. Pauline Bohne and Professor Melanie Mark from the Behavioral Neurobiology Working Group in Bochum, has now shown that the α1D norepinephrine receptor in the cerebellum is responsible for the symptoms. The team reports on these findings in the journal Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences.

‘Chinese Lantern’ Structure Shifts into More Than a Dozen Shapes for Various Applications

Image Credit: Yaoye Hong

Researchers have created a polymer “Chinese lantern” that can snap into more than a dozen curved, three-dimensional shapes by compressing or twisting the original structure. This rapid shape-shifting behavior can be controlled remotely using a magnetic field, allowing the structure to be used for a variety of applications.

The basic lantern object is made by cutting a polymer sheet into a diamond-like parallelogram shape, then cutting a row of parallel lines across the center of each sheet. This creates a row of identical ribbons that is connected by a solid strip of material at the top and bottom of the sheet. By connecting the left and right ends of the solid strips at top and bottom, the polymer sheet forms a three-dimensional shape resembling a roughly spherical Chinese lantern.

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