. Scientific Frontline

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Thyroid gland new possible target for prostate cancer treatment

Lukas Kenner, visiting professor at the Department of Molecular Biology.
Photo Credit: Medizinische Universität Wien

A hormone produced in the thyroid gland can play a key role in the development of prostate cancer. This is shown in a new study by an international research group led by Umeå University, Sweden, and the Medical University of Vienna, Austria. By blocking a receptor for the hormone, the growth of tumor cells in the prostate was inhibited. In the long term, the discovery may open up a new way of attacking certain types of aggressive prostate cancer.

"The results indicate that the receptor in question is a driving force in the growth of cancer. Substances that block it could thus be a target for future drugs against prostate cancer," says Lukas Kenner, visiting professor at Umeå University and the one who has led the study that is published in Molecular Cancer.

The receptor in question is called thyroid hormone receptor Beta, TRβ. It binds the thyroid hormone triiodothyronine, T3. In laboratory experiments, the activation of T3 has led to a sharp increase in the number of prostate cancer cells. However, when the receptor TRβ was inhibited with the help of an active substance, NH-3, significantly reduced the growth of cancer cells. NH-3 is a substance that is only used in research to block TRβ.

New study reveals devastating impact of cane toads approaching the Pilbara

Photo Credit: Dr Judy Dunlop

New Curtin University research has found invasive cane toads are on track to reach Western Australia’s Pilbara region within the next 10 to 20 years, threatening to cause widespread losses among native species and significant cultural and economic harm.

The study, published in Scientific Reports, predicts that without containment efforts, the toxic amphibians will colonise up to 75 per cent of the Pilbara within three decades, putting 25 native species at risk of serious population declines. These include several species of native marsupial predators like northern quolls, ghost bat and kaluta, as well as frog-eating snakes, blue-tongue skinks and goannas.

Of these, nine native mammals and reptiles are expected to become newly listed as threatened species and push the already vulnerable ghost bat to a higher threat category if the toads are not properly managed.

How do plants know how large to grow?

Arabidopsis thaliana is a popular model organism in plant biology and genetics.
Photo Credit: Abhishek Kumar

What makes plants grow to a certain size? From the tiniest cells to whole leaves, roots, and stems, growth has to be carefully coordinated – but until now, it has been hard to compare findings from different studies.

In a new study, researchers at Université de Montréal combined results from 176 experiments on Arabidopsis thaliana, a popular model organism in plant biology and genetics, to build the first ever atlas of plant growth.

The barred owl’s westward migration threatens other species and a whole ecosystem

Barred owls, native to the eastern United States and Canada but invasive to the west, prey on a wide range of species with special conservation status.
Photo Credit: Lane Wintermute/USFWS

A new study of nearly 800 barred owls on the West Coast shows the invasive predator feeds on 29 species given special conservation status by federal and state governments.

The list includes mammals, birds, fish, amphibians and reptiles, according to an analysis led by researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, who describe the wide-ranging pressure the owl’s advance into new territory is putting on native prey and predator species alike.

In 2024, the federal Fish and Wildlife Service adopted plans to reduce the number of barred owls in California, Oregon and Washington to protect a pair of threatened owls, the northern spotted owl and California spotted owl.

The new findings, published before peer review as a preprint on bioRxiv, suggest that the barred owl — which arrived recently in the western United States — is a danger to the survival of more than just competing owls, according to Daniela Arenas-Viveros, a lead author of the study.

Nanorobots transform stem cells into bone cells

Prof. Berna Özkale Edelmann, together with researchers at her Microrobotic Bioengineering Lab at the Technical University of Munich (TUM), developed a system in which stem cells can be transformed into bone cells through mechanical stimulation.
Photo Credit: Astrid Eckert / Technische Universität München

For the first time, researchers at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) have succeeded in using nanorobots to stimulate stem cells with such precision that they are reliably transformed into bone cells. To achieve this, the robots exert external pressure on specific points in the cell wall. The new method offers opportunities for faster treatments in the future.

Prof. Berna Özkale Edelmann’s nanorobots consist of tiny gold rods and plastic chains. Several million of them are contained in a gel cushion measuring just 60 micrometers, together with a few human stem cells. Powered and controlled by laser light, the robots, which look like tiny balls, mechanically stimulate the cells by exerting pressure. “We heat the gel locally and use our system to precisely determine the forces with which the nanorobots press on the cell – thereby stimulating it,” explains the professor of nano- and microrobotics at TUM. This mechanical stimulation triggers biochemical processes in the cell. Ion channels change their properties, and proteins are activated, including one that is particularly important for bone formation.

Monday, November 10, 2025

Behavioral Science: In-Depth Description

Image Credit: Scientific Frontline / stock image

Behavioral Science is the systematic, interdisciplinary study of human and animal behavior, examining the cognitive, emotional, social, and biological drivers of action. Its primary goals are to empirically understand, explain, predict, and, in applied contexts, influence behavior at the individual, group, and societal levels.

Stranded Florida dolphins show Alzheimer’s-like brain changes linked to toxic algal blooms

Photo Credit: Oleksandr Sushko

A new study has discovered that dolphins living in Florida’s Indian River Lagoon show brain changes similar to Alzheimer’s disease. The collaborative study, which included scientists from the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine,  Hubbs-SeaWorld Research Institute (HSWRI), Brain Chemistry Labs, the Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science and Blue World Research Institute, found that dolphins exposed to harmful algal blooms carried high levels of a toxin in their brains and showed warning signs of neurodegeneration.

The study is one of the first to connect neurotoxins found in algal blooms directly to brain changes associated with Alzheimer’s-like disease in a wild marine mammal. It also illustrates how warm water and nutrient pollution, which fuel these blooms, may impact wildlife health.

Aviation: In-Depth Description

Image Credit: Scientific Frontline / stock image

Aviation is the interdisciplinary field encompassing the design, development, production, operation, and use of aircraft, as well as the activities, industries, and organizations associated with mechanical flight and air travel. The primary goal of aviation is to enable safe, efficient, and reliable transportation and movement through the Earth's atmosphere.

Devilishly distinctive new bee species discovered in WA Goldfields

Photo Credit: Kit Prendergast

A new native bee species with tiny devil-like “horns” named Megachile (Hackeriapis) lucifer has been discovered in Western Australia’s Goldfields, highlighting how much remains unknown about Australia’s native pollinators.

The striking new bee was found during surveys of a critically endangered wildflower Marianthus aquilonarius that grows only in the Bremer Range region, which is between the towns of Norseman and Hyden.

Lead author Curtin Adjunct Research Fellow Dr Kit Prendergast, from the Curtin School of Molecular and Life Sciences, said the female bee’s unusual horned face inspired its name lucifer – Latin for “light-bringer,” but also a playful nod to the devilish look.

Scientists Removed Amino Acids From the Diet of Lab Mice — and They Lost Weight

Legumes are a diverse group of plants from the Fabaceae family, including beans, peas, lentils, and peanuts, that grow in pods. They are a highly nutritious food, rich in protein, fiber, vitamins, and minerals, and are often considered a plant-based alternative to animal protein. Legumes also have the unique ability to fix nitrogen from the atmosphere, which benefits soil health.
Photo Credit: Shelley Pauls

It’s not pleasant to shiver from the cold, but for some, it has the appeal of making the body burn more energy as heat than when staying in a warmer environment. According to several studies, exposure to cold is a reliable way to boost energy expenditure in mice and humans. This process of burning energy through heat loss is called thermogenesis.

While scientists and pharmaceutical companies are exploring ways to trick the body into thinking it’s cold—so that it activates thermogenesis and burns energy without the need for ice baths or winter walks in a T-shirt—obesity researchers Philip Ruppert and Jan-Wilhelm Kornfeld from the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (BMB) set out to investigate another route:

A form of thermogenesis triggered by eating specialized diets rather than temperature.

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