Feature Channels: Chemistry

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Released: 18-Nov-2022 2:05 AM EST
Which microorganisms purify Moscow waste water the best? Original bacteria were found in the capital
Scientific Project Lomonosov

Members of Skryabin Institute of bioengineering and Winogradsky Institute of Microbiology, that are the part of Federal Research Center “Biotechnology", Russian Academy of Sciences (Moscow) in the course of working on the project of Russian Scientific Foundation selected samples of activated sludge from nine large waste treatment plants of Moscow and analyzed genes 16S rRNA of their microbal inhabitants.

Newswise:Video Embedded story-tips-genetic-markers-for-autism-hiding-in-plain-sight-recyclable-composites-help-drive-net-zero-goal-evaluating-buildings-in-real-time-nanoreactor-grows-hydrogen-storage-crystals
VIDEO
Released: 17-Nov-2022 2:15 PM EST
Story tips: Genetic markers for autism, hiding in plain sight; Recyclable composites help drive net-zero goal; Evaluating buildings in real time; Nanoreactor grows hydrogen-storage crystals
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Genetic markers for autism, hiding in plain sight; Recyclable composites help drive net-zero goal; Evaluating buildings in real time; Nanoreactor grows hydrogen-storage crystals

   
Newswise:Video Embedded tiniest-ever-ancient-seawater-pockets-revealed
VIDEO
Released: 16-Nov-2022 10:05 PM EST
Tiniest Ever Ancient Seawater Pockets Revealed
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Ancient seawater pockets offer a new source of clues to climate change in vanished oceans and our own.

Newswise: Sanford Burnham Prebys selected for participation in National Cancer Institute Chemical Biology Consortium
Released: 16-Nov-2022 4:40 PM EST
Sanford Burnham Prebys selected for participation in National Cancer Institute Chemical Biology Consortium
Sanford Burnham Prebys

For the third time, Sanford Burnham Prebys has been selected by the Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, currently operated by Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc., supporting the NCI Experimental Therapeutics (NExT) Program as a Center for the Chemical Biology Consortium (CBC).

   
Newswise: Johns Hopkins Researchers Design ‘Prodrug’ That Targets Cancer Cells’ Big Appetite for Glutamine, Leaving Healthy Cells Unharmed
Released: 16-Nov-2022 4:30 PM EST
Johns Hopkins Researchers Design ‘Prodrug’ That Targets Cancer Cells’ Big Appetite for Glutamine, Leaving Healthy Cells Unharmed
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Newly published study in mice show augmented drug eliminates cancer cells without causing toxicity.

Released: 16-Nov-2022 12:50 PM EST
Enzymes could be key to understanding how DNA mutates, quantum biologists find
University of Surrey

Enzymes, which are crucial to controlling how cells replicate in the human body, could be the very ingredient that encourages DNA to spontaneously mutate – causing potentially permanent genetic errors, according to new research from the University of Surrey.

Newswise: Idaho National Laboratory technology hits the marketplace
Released: 16-Nov-2022 10:00 AM EST
Idaho National Laboratory technology hits the marketplace
Idaho National Laboratory (INL)

The marketplace debut of Idaho National Laboratory’s Colorimetric Detection of Actinides, or CoDeAc, isn’t the finish to the award-winning technology’s story. According to its inventors and now investors, it’s just the beginning of a new chapter. “CoDeAc has a bright future,” INL Researcher and CoDeAc inventor Catherine Riddle said. “As it gains interest and expands, there will be new opportunities for future colorimetric detection products and a diverse range of new technologies geared towards rapid radionuclide detection.”

Released: 16-Nov-2022 9:40 AM EST
LI-COR Announces the LI-7825 CO2 Isotope Trace Gas Analyzer
LI-COR Environmental

CO2 isotope measurements are a critical tool for studying climate change and for modelling future climate scenarios.

Released: 15-Nov-2022 1:50 PM EST
Medicines with sugar chains
Wiley

Many proteins contain patterns of sugar molecules (glycans) and are made of several aggregated subunits.

Newswise: Advanced Light Source Upgrade Approved to Start Construction
Released: 15-Nov-2022 12:05 PM EST
Advanced Light Source Upgrade Approved to Start Construction
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Berkeley Lab's ALS has received federal approval to begin construction on an upgrade that will boost the brightness of its X-ray beams at least a hundredfold. Scientists will use the improved beams for research into new materials, chemical reactions, and biological processes. This construction milestone enables the lab’s biggest project in three decades to move from planning to execution.

Newswise: FRIB Experiment Pushes Elements to the Limit
Released: 14-Nov-2022 2:05 PM EST
FRIB Experiment Pushes Elements to the Limit
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

A new study led by the Department of Energy’s Berkeley Lab has measured how long it takes for several kinds of exotic nuclei to decay. The paper, published today in Physical Review Letters, marks the first experimental result from the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams.

Released: 14-Nov-2022 10:05 AM EST
Preventing the next pandemic: Leaders of Pacific Rim Universities meet in Bangkok, Thailand
Newswise

Hosted by Chulalongkorn University the APRU APEC University Leaders' Forum 2022 is the first post-pandemic in-person APEC meeting held to foster high-level dialogue between CEOs, policy leaders, university presidents, and top researchers. This event begins Nov 15 at 9 PM EST.

       
Newswise: Chula’s Potassium Liquid Soap from Used Cooking Oil for a Greener Environment and Circular Economy
Released: 14-Nov-2022 8:55 AM EST
Chula’s Potassium Liquid Soap from Used Cooking Oil for a Greener Environment and Circular Economy
Chulalongkorn University

A researcher from Chulalongkorn University’s Institute for Environmental Research has made it possible to transform used vegetable oil into potassium liquid soap that cleanses effectively, is water soluble, 100% biodegradable, and safe for the wastewater treatment system.

Released: 10-Nov-2022 4:20 PM EST
New technology creates carbon neutral chemicals out of thin air
University of Surrey

It is possible to capture carbon dioxide (CO2) from the surrounding atmosphere and repurpose it into useful chemicals usually made from fossil fuels, according to a study from the University of Surrey.

Newswise: Growing pure nanotubes is a stretch, but possible
Released: 9-Nov-2022 7:35 PM EST
Growing pure nanotubes is a stretch, but possible
Rice University

Like a giraffe stretching for leaves on a tall tree, making carbon nanotubes reach for food as they grow may lead to a long-sought breakthrough.

Released: 9-Nov-2022 7:25 PM EST
Forseeing failure
University of California, Santa Barbara

Take a wire paperclip. Now, bend it back and forth in the same spot 15, maybe 20 times. Chances are the paperclip will have broken before you finish. This is due to what’s called metal fatigue, which occurs when a metal component is cyclically stressed until it fails.

Released: 9-Nov-2022 3:15 PM EST
Knowledge is power. The latest research on arthritis is right at your fingertips
Newswise

Here are some of the latest articles that have been added to the Arthritis channel on Newswise.

Released: 9-Nov-2022 12:15 PM EST
Electrons zip along quantum highways in new material
University of Chicago

Researchers at the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering (PME) have discovered a new material, MnBi6Te10, which can be used to create quantum highways along which electrons can move. These electron thoroughfares are potentially useful in connecting the internal components of powerful, energy-efficient quantum computers.

4-Nov-2022 8:00 AM EDT
New Biomarker Could Help Diagnose Alzheimer’s Disease Early
American Chemical Society (ACS)

Recent studies have led to the development of imaging and spinal fluid tests for patients with Alzheimer's disease. However, the tests can only monitor severe disease. Reporting in ACS Chemical Neuroscience, researchers have now identified a biomarker that could help physicians diagnose AD earlier.

   
4-Nov-2022 8:00 AM EDT
Surprisingly, These microRNAs Boost — Rather Than Dampen — Protein Expression
American Chemical Society (ACS)

microRNAs are thought to suppress protein expression in dividing cells, such as tumor cells. But new research in ACS Central Science shows that some of these molecules can elevate the expression of a particular gene in dividing human cells and in cancer cells, challenging conventional wisdom.

   


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