Curated News: PNAS

Filters close
4-Oct-2019 12:05 PM EDT
Voltage gated calcium channels ‘read’ electric patterns in embryos to create cartilage and bone
Tufts University

Scientists have revealed how the electrical patterns formed within an embryo initiate a cascade of molecular changes that culminate in the development of cartilage and bone. The study demonstrates that voltage gated calcium channels ‘read’ the electrical pattern, setting off the expression of genes that guide differentiation to mature cells

4-Oct-2019 7:05 PM EDT
New silk materials can wrinkle into detailed patterns, then unwrinkle to be “reprinted”
Tufts University

Engineers developed silk materials that can wrinkle into nanotextured patterns – including words, textures and images as intricate as a QR code or a fingerprint. The patterns are stable, but can be erased by flooding the surface of the silk with vapor, allowing the it to be printed again. Researchers see many applications in optical electronics

Released: 3-Oct-2019 9:00 AM EDT
Supercomputing, neutrons unite to unravel structures of intrinsically disordered protein
Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility

Using the Titan supercomputer and the Spallation Neutron Source at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, scientists have created the most accurate 3D model yet of an intrinsically disordered protein, revealing the ensemble of its atomic-level structures.

Released: 1-Oct-2019 3:05 PM EDT
Climate change could pit species against one another as they shift ranges
University of British Columbia

Species have few good options when it comes to surviving climate change--they can genetically adapt to new conditions, shift their ranges, or both.

Released: 30-Sep-2019 3:05 PM EDT
New UCI study explains the molecular mechanism of botanical folk medicines used to treat hypertension
University of California, Irvine

Common herbs, including lavender, fennel and chamomile, have a long history of use as folk medicines used to lower blood pressure. In a new study, University of California, Irvine researchers explain the molecular mechanisms that make them work.

Released: 16-Sep-2019 5:05 PM EDT
Cause of rare, fatal disorder in young children pinpointed
Washington University in St. Louis

Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis appear to have solved a decades-long mystery regarding the precise biochemical pathway leading to a fatal genetic disorder in children that results in seizures, developmental regression and death, usually around age 3. Studying a mouse model with the same human illness — called Krabbe disease — the researchers also identified a possible therapeutic strategy.

Released: 9-Sep-2019 2:05 PM EDT
Good at math? It means little if you’re not confident
Ohio State University

Being good at math relates to better financial and medical outcomes – unless you don’t have confidence in your own abilities with numbers, new research suggests.

   
Released: 5-Sep-2019 3:05 PM EDT
So-Called ‘Longevity Vitamin’ Might Hold More Importance than Scientists Thought
University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences

A University of Florida microbiologist's latest research found that disease-causing bacteria are competing with their human hosts for a key micronutrient.

Released: 4-Sep-2019 9:45 AM EDT
Story tips from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, September 2019
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

ORNL story tips: ORNL’s project for VA bridges computing prowess, VA health data to speed up suicide risk screenings for U.S. veterans; ORNL reveals ionic liquid additive lubricates better than additives in commercial gear oil; researchers use neutron scattering to probe colorful new material that could improve sensors, vivid displays; unique 3D printing approach adds more strength, toughness in certain materials.

Released: 3-Sep-2019 7:05 PM EDT
NUS study reveals similarities in human, chimpanzee, and bonobo eye colour patterns
National University of Singapore (NUS)

Researchers from the National University of Singapore have revealed that chimpanzees and bonobos share the contrasting colour pattern seen in human eyes, which makes it easy for them to detect the direction of someone’s gaze from a distance.

Released: 27-Aug-2019 4:25 PM EDT
Vaccine Against Deadly Superbug Klebsiella Effective in Mice
Washington University in St. Louis

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the biotech startup VaxNewMo have developed a vaccine that is effective, in mice, against hypervirulent strains of Klebsiella that can cause life-threatening infections in healthy adults.

Released: 26-Aug-2019 3:00 PM EDT
Graphene shield shows promise in blocking mosquito bites
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)

An innovative graphene-based film helps shield people from disease-carrying mosquitos, according to a new study funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), part of the National Institutes of Health.

   
21-Aug-2019 2:00 PM EDT
Runaway Mitochondria Cause Telomere Damage in Cells
Health Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh

Targeted damage to mitochondria produces a "Chernobyl effect" inside cells, pelting the nucleus with harmful reactive oxygen species and causing chromosomal damage.

   
Released: 23-Aug-2019 1:05 PM EDT
Breath! Respiring microbes generate more energy
Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

How do cells generate and use energy? This question might seem simple, but the answer is far from simple.

Released: 20-Aug-2019 4:25 PM EDT
Origin of Massive Methane Reservoir Identified
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

New research from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) published Aug. 19, 2019, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science provides evidence of the formation and abundance of abiotic methane—methane formed by chemical reactions that don’t involve organic matter—on Earth and shows how the gases could have a similar origin on other planets and moons, even those no longer home to liquid water. Researchers had long noticed methane released from deep-sea vents. But while the gas is plentiful in the atmosphere where it’s produced by living things, the source of methane at the seafloor was a mystery.

19-Aug-2019 11:20 AM EDT
Glacier-Fed Rivers May Consume Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide
University of Alberta

Study shows chemical weathering is the cause of CO2 consumption in glacier-fed freshwater systems

Released: 19-Aug-2019 3:40 PM EDT
Online Brain Games Can Extend in-Game ‘Cognitive Youth’ Into Old Age, UCI-Led Study Finds
University of California, Irvine

A University of California, Irvine-led study has found that online brain game exercises can enable people in their 70s and even 80s to multitask cognitively as well as individuals 50 years their junior. This is an increasingly valuable skill, given today’s daily information onslaught, which can divide attention and be particularly taxing for older adults.

Released: 16-Aug-2019 9:40 AM EDT
Here's How E. Coli Knows How to Make You Really Sick
University of Virginia Health System

Scientists have revealed how E. coli seeks out the most oxygen-free crevices of your colon to cause the worst infection possible. The discovery could one day help doctors prevent the infection from taking hold by allowing E. coli bacteria to pass harmlessly through your body. The new discovery shows just how the foodborne pathogen knows where and when to begin colonizing the colon on its way to making you sick.

Released: 15-Aug-2019 11:55 AM EDT
National Narcissism Rears Its Head in Study of WWII
Washington University in St. Louis

World War II was, by any measure, a massive undertaking that involved huge loss and suffering.  The countries involved — Allied and Axis — committed substantial resources and sacrificed an astounding number of human lives. No matter how much a particular country contributed however, the sum total of all losses cannot equal more than 100%.

Released: 15-Aug-2019 11:20 AM EDT
For Superconductors, Discovery Comes From Disorder
Argonne National Laboratory

In a new study, scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory have explained the ways in which two electronic arrangements compete with each other and ultimately affect the temperature at which a material becomes superconducting.

Released: 7-Aug-2019 11:55 AM EDT
Police violence a leading cause of death among specific U.S. groups, ‘sobering’ study finds
Washington University in St. Louis

Violence at the hands of police is a leading cause of death for young men in the United States, finds a new study involving Washington University in St. Louis.“Over the life course, about 1 in every 1,000 black men can expect to be killed by police,” said Hedwig (Hedy) Lee, professor of sociology in Arts & Sciences and associate director of the Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity.

Released: 7-Aug-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Blue Sharks Use Eddies for Fast Track to Food
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Blue sharks use large, swirling ocean currents, known as eddies, to fast-track their way down to feed in the ocean twilight zone—a layer of the ocean between 200 and 1000 meters deep containing the largest fish biomass on Earth, according to new research by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and the Applied Physics Lab at the University of Washington (UW). Their findings were published August 6, 2019, in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Released: 31-Jul-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Research collaboration reveals new antiviral function in sense of smell in fish
Texas State University

Researchers at Texas State University, collaborating with a team from the University of New Mexico, have discovered that fish can smell viruses, prompting fast antiviral immune responses.

Released: 31-Jul-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Krypton reveals ancient water beneath the Israeli desert
Argonne National Laboratory

Getting reliable precipitation data from the past has proven difficult, as is predicting regional changes for climate models in the present. A combination of isotope techniques developed by researchers at Argonne and UChicago may help resolve both.

Released: 24-Jul-2019 12:05 PM EDT
Nanoparticles promote functional healing following spinal cord injury
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Paralyzing damage in spinal cord injury is often caused by the zealous immune response to the injury. NIBIB-funded engineers have developed nanoparticles that lure immune cells away from the spinal cord, allowing regeneration that restored spinal cord function in mice.

   
17-Jul-2019 3:05 PM EDT
Evolutionary Gene Loss May Help Explain Why Only Humans are Prone to Heart Attacks
UC San Diego Health

University of California San Diego School of Medicine scientists say the loss of a single gene two to three million years ago in our ancestors may have resulted in a heightened risk of cardiovascular disease in all humans as a species, while also setting up a further risk for red meat-eating humans.

18-Jul-2019 3:00 PM EDT
The truth behind racial disparities in fatal police shootings
Michigan State University

Contrary to what many think, a comprehensive and sweeping review of all fatal police shootings across the nation reveals

Released: 10-Jul-2019 2:05 PM EDT
No more trial-and-error when choosing an electrolyte for metal-air batteries
Washington University in St. Louis

Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis have developed a one-parameter measure that makes selecting the correct electrolyte for potassium-air batteries an exercise in rationality, rather than patience.

Released: 10-Jul-2019 10:05 AM EDT
How mosquito immune system fights off malaria parasite
Iowa State University

A new study describes the way mosquito immune systems fight malaria parasites using various waves of resistance. The study could lay the groundwork for future research to combat the transmission of malaria, which sickens millions of people across the globe every year.

26-Jun-2019 1:05 PM EDT
Wood products mitigate less than 1 percent of global carbon emissions
University of Wisconsin–Madison

The world’s wood products — all the paper, lumber, furniture and more — offset just 1 percent of annual global carbon emissions by locking away carbon in woody forms, according to new University of Wisconsin–Madison research.

19-Jun-2019 2:05 PM EDT
Monarch butterflies bred in captivity may lose the ability to migrate, study finds
University of Chicago Medical Center

Monarch butterflies purchased from a commercial breeder did not fly in a southward direction, even in offspring raised outdoors, in a new study conducted by scientists at the University of Chicago.

Released: 17-Jun-2019 11:00 AM EDT
Science Snapshots: new nitrides, artificial photosynthesis, and TMDC semiconductors
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

From Berkeley Lab: groundbreaking study maps out paths to new nitride materials; new framework for artificial photosynthesis; TMDCs don’t have to be perfect to shine bright.

12-Jun-2019 2:20 PM EDT
Electron (or 'Hole') Pairs May Survive Effort to Kill Superconductivity
Brookhaven National Laboratory

Scientists seeking to understand the mechanism underlying superconductivity in “stripe-ordered” cuprates—copper-oxide materials with alternating areas of electric charge and magnetism—discovered an unusual metallic state when attempting to turn superconductivity off. They found that under the conditions of their experiment, even after the material loses its ability to carry electrical current with no energy loss, it retains some conductivity—and possibly the electron (or hole) pairs required for its superconducting superpower.

Released: 11-Jun-2019 12:05 PM EDT
Researchers grow bone at rib to restore facial bone
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Bioengineers used bone engineered in 3D-printed mold and grown alongside the ribs of sheep to successfully replace a portion of the animals’ jaw bones. They hope to develop the tissue regenerative procedure for human application .

Released: 11-Jun-2019 11:50 AM EDT
Drug to Treat Malaria Could Mitigate Hereditary Hearing Loss
Case Western Reserve University

The ability to hear depends on proteins to reach the outer membrane of sensory cells in the inner ear. But in certain types of hereditary hearing loss, mutations in the protein prevent it from reaching these membranes.

Released: 10-Jun-2019 6:20 PM EDT
Sex, lice and videotape
University of Utah

University of Utah biologists demonstrated real-time adaptation in their lab that triggered reproductive isolation in just four years. They began with a single population of parasitic feather lice, split the population in two and transferred them onto different-sized hosts—pigeons with small feathers, and pigeons with large feathers. The pigeons preened at the lice and populations adapted quickly by evolving differences in body size. When paired together, males and females that were too different or too similar in size laid zero eggs.

7-Jun-2019 12:25 PM EDT
Hamsters take cues from decreasing day length to prepare for the long winter
University of Chicago Medical Center

Analysis of the first fully-sequenced genome of the Siberian hamster shows how these small, seasonal breeders adapt their bodies and energy usage to survive the winter. The study shows that shifting day length alone was enough to trigger these changes, regardless of temperature or how much food is available.

Released: 4-Jun-2019 8:05 AM EDT
Floating power plants
Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

Huge floating solar islands on the ocean that produce enough energy to enable CO2-neutral global freight traffic - what sounds like "science fiction" researchers from ETH Zurich, the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), Empa, the Universities of Zurich and Bern and the Nowegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) in Trondheim have now calculated for the first time, as they write in the latest issue of the journal "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences" (PNAS).

Released: 3-Jun-2019 12:40 PM EDT
Drug-resistant tuberculosis reversed in lab
Washington University in St. Louis

Tuberculosis is the most lethal infectious disease in the world. Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Umea University in Sweden have found a compound that can prevent and even reverse antibiotic resistance in TB bacteria.

23-May-2019 4:05 AM EDT
De-TOXing exhausted T cells may bolster CAR T immunotherapy against solid tumors
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

A decade ago researchers announced development of a cancer immunotherapy called CAR (for chimeric antigen receptor)-T, in which a patient is re-infused with their own genetically modified T cells equipped to mount a potent anti-tumor attack.

24-May-2019 12:05 PM EDT
A forest “glow” reveals awakening from hibernation
University of Utah

Gross Primary Production (GPP) in forests tells scientists how much CO2 these systems are breathing in. Evergreen trees retain their green needles year round, preventing scientists from detecting GPP on large scales. A study linked GPP with solar-induced fluorescence in evergreens, which can be tracked by satellites.

Released: 23-May-2019 8:00 AM EDT
Science Snapshots: Lithium Under Pressure, A 'Silver Bullet' for the Conversion of Carbon Dioxide, Understanding Microbiomes for Wastewater Treatment
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Researchers at Berkeley Lab’s Molecular Foundry have predicted fascinating new properties of lithium; a powerful combination of experiment and theory has revealed atomic-level details about how silver helps transform carbon dioxide gas into a reusable form; new study reports the first comprehensive

20-May-2019 10:05 AM EDT
Circadian Mechanism May Not Be Driver Behind Compound Linked to Obesity and Diabetes
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

SR9009 is a compound that can lead to a wide range of health benefits in animals, including reduced risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes. Until now, researchers have attributed the effects to SR9009’s role in altering the body’s circadian clock. However, in a first-of-its-kind study from Penn Medicine, published today in PNAS, researchers found that SR9009 can effect cell growth and metabolic function without the involvement of REV-ERBs.

Released: 14-May-2019 2:45 PM EDT
Tooth Fossils Fill 6-Million-Year-Old Gap in Primate Evolution
University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV)

UNLV geoscientist, student among international research team behind discovery of ancient monkey species that lived in Africa 22 million years ago.

Released: 14-May-2019 1:05 PM EDT
Flu virus' best friend: Low humidity
Yale University

Yale researchers have pinpointed a key reason why people are more likely to get sick and even die from flu during winter months: low humidity.

Released: 13-May-2019 10:40 AM EDT
Catch a Virus by Its Tail
Harvard Medical School

Research uncovers key mechanism that allows some of the deadliest human RNA viruses to orchestrate the precise copying of the individual pieces of their viral genome and replicate. Research reveals that the tail end of a virus’s RNA plays a key role in ensuring each segment of the viral genome is copied in the correct amount. Experiments show the viral replication machinery latches onto the 5' end of the virus’s RNA strand, a move that activates the enzyme to start copying at the opposite end of a specific segment. The findings identify new targets to inhibit viral replication and may inform the development of a novel class of antiviral drugs.

Released: 30-Apr-2019 4:25 PM EDT
Do You Smell What I Smell?
Monell Chemical Senses Center

A new study shows that small changes in a single olfactory receptor gene can affect how strong and pleasant a person finds an odor. The findings expand understanding of how olfactory receptors in the nose encode information about the properties of odors even before that information reaches the brain.

Released: 30-Apr-2019 2:30 PM EDT
Pest-killing fungi could protect NYS grapes, apples from invasive insect
Cornell University

Cornell University-led research reports that two local fungal pathogens could potentially curb an invasive insect that has New York vineyard owners on edge.

Released: 26-Apr-2019 1:00 AM EDT
Defying the Laws of Physics? Columbia Engineers Demonstrate Bubbles of Sand
Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science

A recent discovery by Columbia Engineering researchers explains a new family of gravitational instabilities in granular particles of different densities that are driven by a gas-channeling mechanism not seen in fluids. The team observed an unexpected Rayleigh-Taylor (R-T)-like instability in which lighter grains rise through heavier grains in the form of “fingers” and “granular bubbles, similar to the bubbles that form and rise in lava lamps.



close
2.15944