WETENSCHAP EN TECHNOLOGIE BL – 2

Een overzicht van buitenlandse Wetenschap en Technologie Sites

VAN DER BILT UNIVERSITY

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN

PROTOCOL

No RSS Item

NATURE

PNAS – SCIENTIFIC JOURNALS

    +

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: Table of Contents

  • In This Issue
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 122, Issue 19, May 2025. <br/>... Read more »
  • Acute chromatin decompaction stiffens the nucleus as revealed by nanopillar-induced nuclear deformation in cells
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 122, Issue 19, May 2025. <br/>SignificanceMany cellular processes such as wound healing, immune activation, and DNA damage repair require a temporally decompact and accessible chromatin structure. Whether such short-term remodeling of the chromatin impacts nucleus mechanics and ...... Read more »
  • The developmental factor TBX3 engages with the Wnt/β-catenin transcriptional complex in colorectal cancer to regulate metastasis genes
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 122, Issue 19, May 2025. <br/>SignificanceDysregulated Wnt signaling is a well-established driver of colorectal carcinogenesis. However, its pivotal role in normal intestinal stem cell homeostasis has posed significant challenges for its therapeutic inhibition, highlighting the need ...... Read more »
  • Blocking C-terminal processing of KRAS4b via a direct covalent attack on the CaaX-box cysteine
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 122, Issue 19, May 2025. <br/>SignificanceThe development of small molecule KRAS inhibitors has proven to be a challenge. Recent clinical development of covalent KRAS G12C inhibitors demonstrates the potential of targeting KRAS oncogenic proteins directly. Compounds that target the ...... Read more »
  • OGG1S326C variant frequent in human populations facilitates inflammatory responses due to its extended interaction with DNA substrate
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 122, Issue 19, May 2025. <br/>SignificanceOGG1S326C, a variant widely recognized as a risk factor for various malignancies and other diseases, has drawn significant attention due to its high prevalence (~20% in Caucasians and ~40 to 60% in Asians) in human populations. Despite... Read more »
  • Social dominance in rats is a determinant of susceptibility to stress
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 122, Issue 19, May 2025. <br/>SignificanceAlthough stress has significant impact on brain and behavior, its effects vary between individuals. Relatively little is known about how social status contributes to individual differences in stress vulnerability. We report that stress affects ...... Read more »
  • Architecture of Pseudomonas aeruginosa glutamyl-tRNA synthetase defines a subfamily of dimeric class Ib aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 122, Issue 19, May 2025. <br/>SignificancePseudomonas aeruginosais a common cause of hospital-related infections and a formidable health threat due to its evolving antibiotic resistance.PaGluRS is homologous to other bacterial GluRSs in its domain architecture, but has evolved a ...... Read more »

Science News

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

CODON MAG

No RSS Item

INTERESTING ENGINEERING

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON

LIVE SCIENCE

SciTechDaily

    +

    SciTechDaily

  • Beef Emissions Blow Past Climate Limits – Over Twice the Target
    Researchers from the Federal University of São Paulo emphasize the importance of implementing emission reduction practices throughout the production chain. Beef production is a cornerstone of Brazil’s economy, but it also ranks among the country’s top sources of greenhouse gas emissions. According to a new study published in the journal... Read more »
  • Glacier Speeds Up by 87% in a Shocking Case of “Ice Piracy”
    In a dramatic twist, scientists have discovered that one fast-moving glacier in West Antarctica is “stealing” ice from its slower neighbor—a process dubbed “ice piracy.” This was once thought to take millennia, but satellite data now reveals it can unfold in under two decades. The finding rewrites our understanding of... Read more »
  • Massive Iceberg Calves in Antarctica, Revealing a Hidden Seafloor Bursting With Life
    A team of scientists aboard the R/V Falkor (too) made an unexpected discovery after an iceberg the size of Chicago broke off from Antarctica’s George VI Ice Shelf. With rare access to a seafloor that had been hidden under ice for centuries, they quickly adapted their mission to explore the... Read more »
  • A Simple Eye Exam Could Spot Parkinson’s Before It Strikes
    New research reveals a retinal light test may hold the key to detecting Parkinson’s disease long before motor symptoms appear. Could your eyes reveal signs of Parkinson’s disease before symptoms appear? A new study says yes—and it might revolutionize early detection. Researchers from Université Laval, publishing in the journal Neurobiology... Read more »
  • Always Tired? A Mini-Stroke You Didn’t Notice Could Be Why
    Fatigue may linger for a year after a mini-stroke, especially in people with prior anxiety or depression. Even when physical symptoms vanish in a day, tiredness can stubbornly remain. A transient ischemic attack, or TIA—often called a mini-stroke—is typically seen as a brief blockage of blood flow to the brain.... Read more »
  • IceCube Spots Space’s Strangest Signal: A Neutrino Torrent With No Gamma Flash
    Powerful neutrinos from a distant galaxy hint at a surprising origin: helium atoms torn apart by UV light near a black hole, reshaping what we thought we knew about cosmic jets. In deep space, powerful neutrinos are typically found alongside bursts of gamma rays. But galaxy NGC 1068 is behaving... Read more »
  • The Great Cosmic Wiggle: Quasars Reveal Gravity’s Hidden Rhythm
    Gravitational waves are constantly washing over Earth, but an astrophysicist aims to capture them in an entirely new way—by watching distant quasars appear to wiggle due to spacetime distortions. Using data from the Gaia satellite, he’s searching for three-dimensional effects that previous techniques might have missed. Exploring a New Method... Read more »

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY

MESON STARS

NEW SCIENTIST

NEUROSCIENCE NEWS

    +

    Neuroscience News

  • Spreading Brain Waves Drain Neuron Energy
    Researchers have, for the first time, tracked how individual neurons lose and recover energy during spreading depolarizations — waves of electrical disturbance linked to brain disorders like stroke. Using genetically modified mice and real-time fluorescent microscopy, the team visualized adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels in neurons under both healthy and stroke-like... Read more »
  • Early Bonding Buffers Kids from Lasting Effects of Maternal Depression
    A new study highlights the lasting impact of postpartum maternal depression and mother-to-infant bonding on children’s emotional and behavioral outcomes. Researchers found that early bonding can partially offset the negative effects of maternal depression, reducing future psychosocial difficulties.... Read more »
  • Early ADHD Treatment May Mean Years on Medication
    A large Finnish registry study reveals that many children, especially boys who begin ADHD medication between ages 6 and 8, remain on treatment for more than seven years. While the average duration of ADHD medication was over three years, a quarter of treated children remained on it for over seven,... Read more »
  • Brain’s Arousal Regulator Found
    A new study reveals that a small cluster of cells near the brain's "blue spot"—the locus coeruleus—helps regulate arousal, attention, and stress responses. These peri-LC neurons modulate the locus coeruleus by releasing GABA, which reduces its activity and dampens the release of norepinephrine.... Read more »
  • Excessive Sleep May Hurt Cognitive Function
    Sleeping more than nine hours a night may be detrimental to brain health, particularly for individuals experiencing symptoms of depression, according to a new study. Researchers analyzed data from nearly 2,000 dementia-free adults and found that long sleep duration was associated with worse performance in memory, visuospatial ability, and executive... Read more »
  • Two Learning Systems in the Brain Reveal How Habits Are Formed
    The brain uses two separate dopamine-based learning systems: one for evaluating outcomes and another for reinforcing repeated actions. Known as reward prediction error (RPE) and action prediction error (APE), these systems help explain how habits form and why they can become difficult to break.... Read more »
  • AI’s Spontaneously Develop Social Norms Like Humans
    Large language model (LLM) AI agents, when interacting in groups, can form shared social conventions without centralized coordination. Researchers adapted a classic “naming game” framework to test whether populations of AI agents could develop consensus through repeated, limited interactions.... Read more »

WETENSCHAP EN TECHNOLOGIE ARTIKELEN

WETENSCHAP EN TECHNOLOGIE SITES