. Scientific Frontline

Monday, November 24, 2025

Blood protein profiles can predict mortality

Photo Credit: Akram Huseyn

Elevated levels of five proteins in our blood can help predict risk of mortality, a new study from the University of Surrey finds. Scientists believe the proteins (PLAUR, SERPINA3, CRIM1, DDR1 and LTBP2), that play key roles in the development of diseases such as cancer and inflammation, may also contribute to the risk of dying. Findings could help clinicians identify individuals most at risk from mortality and lead to earlier medical interventions.   

The study also discovered 392 proteins associated with an increased risk of death within a 5-year timeframe and a further 377 proteins associated with dying within 10 years, even when adjusting for health and lifestyle factors, such as smoking or pre-existing disease diagnoses. Proteins perform a wide range of essential functions in the body and are vital for growth, development, and the structure of every cell.  

Antarctic mountains could boost ocean carbon absorption

Glaciers transport sediments from Antarctica to the coast.
Photo Credit: Dr Kate Winter, Northumbria University

Research involving scientists from Newcastle University has revealed new hope in natural environmental systems found in Antarctica which could help mitigate the overall rise of carbon dioxide. 

As Antarctica's ice sheets thin due to climate change, newly exposed mountain peaks could significantly increase the supply of vital nutrients to the Southern Ocean which surrounds the continent, potentially enhancing its ability to absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide over long timescales, according to the research published in Nature Communications

Led by Northumbria University, a team of scientists looked at analysis of sediment samples from East Antarctica's Sør Rondane Mountains. They discovered that weathered rocks exposed above the ice surface contain iron concentrations up to ten times higher than previously reported from the Antarctic continent. This bioavailable iron is transported to the ocean by glaciers and icebergs, where it fuels the growth of phytoplankton – microscopic marine organisms that absorb CO₂ through photosynthesis. 

New Artificial Intelligence Model Could Speed Rare Disease Diagnosis

A DNA strand with a highlighted area indicating a mutation
Image Credit: Scientific Frontline

Every human has tens of thousands of tiny genetic alterations in their DNA, also known as variants, that affect how cells build proteins.

Yet in a given human genome, only a few of these changes are likely to modify proteins in ways that cause disease, which raises a key question: How can scientists find the disease-causing needles in the vast haystack of genetic variants?

For years, scientists have been working on genome-wide association studies and artificial intelligence tools to tackle this question. Now, a new AI model developed by Harvard Medical School researchers and colleagues has pushed forward these efforts. The model, called popEVE, produces a score for each variant in a patient’s genome indicating its likelihood of causing disease and places variants on a continuous spectrum.

Why Do We Have a Consciousness?

Albert Newen from the Institute of Philosophy II
Photo Credit: © RUB, Marquard

What is the evolutionary advantage of our consciousness? And what can we learn about this from observing birds? Researchers at Ruhr University Bochum published two articles on this topic. 

Although scientific research about consciousness has enjoyed a boom in the past two decades, one central question remains unanswered: What is the function of consciousness? Why did it evolve at all? The answers to these questions are crucial to understanding why some species (such as our own) became conscious while others (such as oak trees) did not. Furthermore, observing the brains of birds shows that evolution can achieve similar functional solutions to realize consciousness despite different structures. The working groups led by Professors Albert Newen and Onur Güntürkün at Ruhr University Bochum, Germany, report their findings in a current special issue of the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Kleopatra

Image Credit: Scientific Frontline

In the modern digital ecosystem, the email inbox and local file storage remain vulnerable entry points for surveillance, data theft, and unauthorized access. While transport layer security (TLS) protects data in transit, it often leaves the data itself exposed at rest or at the endpoints. For professionals in journalism, law, science, and academia, relying solely on provider-managed security is increasingly insufficient.

The challenge lies in complexity: robust encryption standards like OpenPGP are historically difficult for non-technical users to implement, often requiring cumbersome command-line interactions.

Nasal drops fight brain tumors noninvasively

Researchers at WashU Medicine have developed a noninvasive medicine delivered through the nose that successfully eliminated deadly brain tumors in mice. The medicine is based on a spherical nucleic acid, a nanomaterial (labeled red) that travels along a nerve (green) from the nose to the brain, where it triggers an immune response to eliminate the tumor.
Image Credit: Courtesy of Alexander Stegh

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, along with collaborators at Northwestern University, have developed a noninvasive approach to treat one of the most aggressive and deadly brain cancers. Their technology uses precisely engineered structures assembled from nano-size materials to deliver potent tumor-fighting medicine to the brain through nasal drops. The novel delivery method is less invasive than similar treatments in development and was shown in mice to effectively treat glioblastoma by boosting the brain’s immune response.

Glioblastoma tumors form from brain cells called astrocytes and are the most common kind of brain cancer, affecting roughly three in 100,000 people in the U.S. Glioblastoma generally progresses very quickly and is almost always fatal. There are no curative treatments for the disease, in part because delivering medicines to the brain remains extremely challenging.

LJI scientists discover how T cells transform to defend our organs

The new study was led by Pandurangan Vijayanand, M.D., Ph.D., William K. Bowes Distinguished Professor at La Jolla Institute for Immunology
Photo Credit: Courtesy of La Jolla Institute for Immunology

We owe a lot to tissue resident memory T cells (TRM). These specialized immune cells are among the body’s first responders to disease. 

Rather than coursing through the bloodstream—as many T cells do—our TRM cells specialize in defending specific organs. They battle viruses, breast cancer, liver cancer, melanomas, and many other health threats. 

Pandurangan Vijayanand, M.D., Ph.D., William K. Bowes Distinguished Professor at La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI), has even shown that a greater density of TRM cells is linked to better survival outcomes in lung cancer patients.

Saturday, November 22, 2025

What Is: Mitochondrion


Evolutionary Singularities and the Eukaryotic Dawn

The mitochondrion represents a biological singularity, a discrete evolutionary event that fundamentally partitioned life on Earth into two distinct energetic stratums: the prokaryotic and the eukaryotic. While colloquially reduced to the moniker of "cellular powerhouse," the mitochondrion is, in functional reality, a highly integrated endosymbiont that serves as the master regulator of eukaryotic physiology. It is the nexus of cellular respiration, the arbiter of programmed cell death, a buffer for intracellular calcium, and a hub for biosynthetic pathways ranging from heme synthesis to steroidogenesis. To comprehend the complexity of multicellular life, one must first dissect the intricate molecular sociology of this organelle.   

The origin of the mitochondrion is the subject of intense phylogenomic reconstruction. The prevailing consensus, the endosymbiotic theory, posits that the mitochondrion descends from a free-living bacterial ancestor—specifically a lineage within the Alphaproteobacteria—that entered into a symbiotic relationship with a host archaeal cell approximately 1.5 to 2 billion years ago. This was not a trivial acquisition but a transformative merger. The energetic capacity afforded by the internalization of a bioenergetic specialist allowed the host cell to escape the surface-area-to-volume constraints that limit prokaryotic genome size, facilitating the expansion of the nuclear genome and the development of complex intracellular compartmentalization. 

Friday, November 21, 2025

Rice engineers show lab grown diamond films can stop costly mineral buildup in pipes

Pulickel Ajayan and Xiang Zhang
Photo Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University

In industrial pipes, mineral deposits build up the way limescale collects inside a kettle ⎯ only on a far larger and more expensive scale. Mineral scaling is a major issue in water and energy systems, where it slows flow, strains equipment and drives up costs.

A new study by Rice University engineers shows that lab-grown diamond coatings could resolve the issue, providing an alternative to chemical additives and mechanical cleaning, both of which offer only temporary relief and carry environmental or operational downsides.

“Because of these limitations, there is growing interest in materials that can naturally resist scale formation without constant intervention,” said Xiang Zhang, assistant research professor of materials science and nanoengineering and a first author on the study alongside Rice postdoctoral researcher Yifan Zhu. “Our work addresses this urgent need by identifying a coating material that can ‘stay clean’ on its own.”

Forensic Science: In-Depth Description

Image Credit: Scientific Frontline / stock image AI

Forensic Science is the rigorous application of scientific principles and methods to matters of criminal and civil law is the rigorous application of scientific principles and methods to matters of criminal and civil law. It serves as the critical intersection between the scientific community and the justice system, tasked with the collection, preservation, and analysis of physical evidence to reconstruct events, identify perpetrators or victims, and establish objective facts for legal proceedings.

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