PANoptosis in the Aging of the Heart
The review spotlights PANoptosis—a hybrid programmed cell‑death process that fuses pyroptosis, apoptosis and necroptosis—and its emerging relevance to cardiac aging. It details how the PANoptosome complex accelerates cardiomyocyte loss, fibrosis and chronic inflammation, key drivers of age‑related heart decline. Preclinical work using gene‑editing, RNA‑interference and novel delivery platforms shows that modulating PANoptosis can preserve cardiac function. By mapping molecular pathways and intervention points, the article lays groundwork for next‑generation therapies targeting heart aging.
High Dose Influenza Vaccine Correlates with Greater Reduction in Dementia Risk
A retrospective cohort study of U.S. seniors found that receiving a high‑dose inactivated influenza vaccine (H‑IIV) was associated with a significantly lower risk of Alzheimer’s disease compared with the standard‑dose vaccine (S‑IIV). The analysis used claims data from 2014‑2019, covering...

How to Make Cancer Therapies BETter: An Insight Into the Distinct Roles of BET Proteins
A new study from the Max Planck Institute reveals that BET proteins BRD2 and BRD4 play distinct, sequential roles in gene activation, explaining why broad‑spectrum BET inhibitors have shown limited clinical success. BRD4 drives the release of RNA polymerase II,...
Reliable Material Databases Bridge AI- and Experimental-Led Material Discovery
Researchers in a Precision Chemistry paper argue that modern materials databases have evolved from passive repositories into active engines for AI‑driven discovery. By categorizing computational and experimental data sources, they show how database architecture directly influences model accuracy and reliability....
Release of the Exoplanet Database EXOKYOTO3D and Announcement of the Extended Version EXOKYOTO4D
A research team at Kyoto University has launched EXOKYOTO3D, a next‑generation exoplanet database that visualizes planets in three‑dimensional star maps, renders surface art, and estimates planetary environments from stellar spectra. The platform, built on the earlier Japanese‑language ExoKyoto database, also...
Breathing New Life Into Tubercolosis Treatment with Iinhalable Nanomedicine
Scientists at the University of Witwatersrand’s Wits Advanced Drug Delivery Platform have created an inhalable nanocarrier that can encapsulate all four first‑line tuberculosis drugs and release them directly in the lungs. The system bypasses the liver and bloodstream, aiming to...
Octopus-Shaped Nanomachine Reprograms ATP Flow to Starve Cancer Cells
Researchers unveiled an octopus‑shaped nanomachine, HSA‑ABC, that anchors to cancer cell membranes and uses an ATP‑sensing aptamer to trigger photodynamic therapy and rapid doxorubicin delivery. The device creates a self‑amplifying cycle: ATP binding activates a photosensitizer, damaging the membrane, which...

2g/Day of DHA for 2 Years Has No Impact on Cognition or Hippocampal Volume
A two‑year randomized trial gave participants 2 g of DHA daily and found no measurable improvement in cognitive performance or hippocampal volume. The null result adds to a growing body of RCTs that fail to demonstrate brain benefits from DHA supplementation...

“I Don’t Need Those Pills”—Until the Second Heart Attack
At ACC 2026, researchers unveiled the Ez‑PAVE trial, a multicenter, randomized study of 3,048 South Korean patients with established atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. The trial compared an ultra‑low LDL‑C target of <40 mg/dL against a conventional target of <70 mg/dL, using statin plus...

Skeptical Science New Research for Week #15 2026
This week’s Skeptical Science roundup highlights four major developments: researchers call for solar‑geoengineering studies that incorporate geopolitical conflict, a new analysis links El Niño events to accelerated spring melt of West Greenland sea ice, and Arctic sea‑ice variability has risen 11.4%...

Cell-to-Cell Power Grid: How Mitochondrial Transplantation Is Redefining Metabolic Aging and Tissue Rescue
A new comprehensive literature review evaluates mitochondrial transplantation (MTx) and the Drp1 inhibitor Mdivi‑1 as experimental strategies to reverse metabolic aging in diabetic animal models. The analysis highlights how MSC‑derived mitochondria can induce mitophagy, suppress apoptosis, and modulate immune pathways...

ESA Spent €82 Million to Launch Sentinel-1D Satellite on Ariane 6
The European Space Agency disclosed that the Sentinel‑1D Earth‑observation satellite launched on an Ariane 62 rocket in November 2025 cost €82,070,773, roughly $89 million. The mission was originally slated for a Vega‑C launch, but the rocket’s two‑year grounding forced a switch to...
Red-Light Therapy: Breakthrough or Junk Science?
Red‑light therapy is attracting both scientific interest and commercial hype. Recent clinical studies have documented measurable improvements in peripheral neuropathy, retinal degeneration, and certain neurological disorders, leading some professional societies to endorse specific treatment protocols. At the same time, researchers...
STOMP—Scientists Skeptical of RFK, Jr.’s Dubious Crusade on Microplastics
The U.S. Health and Human Services Department and the EPA announced a $144 million Systematic Targeting of Microplastics (STOMP) initiative, led by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and EPA head Lee Zeldin. The program will develop standardized detection methods, map microplastic presence...

Molecular Hydrogen as a Treatment for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Molecular hydrogen is emerging as a potential therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) by protecting mitochondria from oxidative damage and restoring cellular energy production. Pre‑clinical and early‑stage human trials show hydrogen‑rich water and inhalation improve endurance, lower blood lactate, and...
Building Momentum
NASA’s Artemis II mission, the first crewed lunar flyby since Apollo, launched in early April 2026 after a modest start. Real‑time images of the Orion capsule sparked a surge of media attention, temporarily eclipsing the usual news cycle. The excitement is expected...
In Which Direction Does Water Drain at the Equator?
The article debunks the popular myth that the Coriolis effect determines the direction water drains in sinks, especially at the Equator. It explains that the force is far too weak to influence small bodies of water, with drain shape and...
Silver Nanowire Electrodes Achieve 86% Efficiency in CO2 to Ethylene Conversion
Researchers at KAIST unveiled a three‑layer electrode that uses silver nanowire networks as both conductors and catalysts, achieving up to 86% selectivity for converting CO₂ into ethylene and other multi‑carbon products. The design tackles electrode flooding by pairing a hydrophobic...
Tumor-Inspired Microparticles Reprogram Fat Cells and Improve Insulin Sensitivity
Researchers have engineered injectable silica microparticles that mimic the nanoscale surface roughness of invasive cancer cells, stripping away all biological material. When cultured on these tumor‑inspired topographies, mouse adipocytes rapidly lose their mature phenotype, become multipotent stem‑like cells, and exhibit...

Leiden Exhibits 1913 Liquid Helium Breakthrough & Quantum Materials
Leiden University marked its 450th anniversary with an exhibition linking Heike Kamerlingh Onnes’s 1913 liquid‑helium breakthrough to today’s quantum‑materials research. The showcase juxtaposes historic photos of the Nobel‑winning liquefaction experiment with modern studies of van der Waals layers using low‑energy electron microscopes. It also...
Liquid Metals as Vital Materials for Future Deep-Space Missions
A research team led by Prof. Liu Jing at the Chinese Academy of Sciences has shown that room‑temperature liquid metals can serve as critical materials for deep‑space missions. Published in Cell Press Blue, the study highlights liquid‑metal‑based power systems, propulsion, thermal‑management,...

Irreproducibility and Public Trust
A new Nature paper led by Maynooth University researchers replicated 274 positive claims from 164 social‑behavioural science papers and found only 55% reproduced the original results, with effect sizes falling from r = 0.25 to r = 0.10. The study highlights modest variation across...
Data on the Effective Long Term Treatment of Transthyretin Amyloidosis
A new open‑label extension of the ATTRibute‑CM trial provides the first long‑term data on acoramidis, an approved transthyretin stabilizer, showing sustained efficacy through month 54 (4½ years). Continuous treatment cut all‑cause mortality by 45% (HR 0.55) and cardiovascular mortality by 49%...

The Advanced Propulsion Research Center Hidden in Plain Sight
Renaissance Technologies, the quantitative hedge fund founded by Jim Simons, employs roughly 90 PhDs in mathematics, physics and computer science. Nobel‑level mathematician Isadore Singer described the firm’s Long Island campus as the "world’s greatest mathematics and physics department." The blog...

Equal1’s Silicon Qubits Gain Autonomous Calibration with Q-CTRL
Equal1 has partnered with quantum‑control specialist Q‑CTRL to embed its Boulder Opal Scale Up software into the company’s Bell‑series silicon qubit systems. The integration adds autonomous calibration, eliminating the need for manual, expert‑driven tuning of quantum hardware. This software‑driven autonomy...

Martina Matusko Joins Planqc to Build Quantum Computer with Neutral Atoms
Planqc has appointed Martina Matusko as a Quantum Hardware Engineer to accelerate its neutral‑atom quantum computer program. Matusko, a physicist with a PhD in quantum metrology and prior software experience, will lead atom‑trapping operations and hardware development in the Munich‑area lab....

Fully Programmable Quantum Computing with Trapped-Ions
Researchers at Quantum Art in Israel unveiled a semi‑global field technique that leverages all motional modes of ion crystals to execute universal quantum gates. By combining global drives with a limited number of semi‑global fields and single‑qubit flips, the team...

The Planet Is Flickering
NASA’s Artemis II mission captured a new "Blue Marble" image, prompting a fresh look at Earth’s night‑time glow. A Nature study led by University of Connecticut’s Zhe Zhu examined 1.2 million daily Black Marble satellite images from 2014‑2022, revealing a 34% rise in...

Bursting Bubbles
Researchers visualized how air bubbles rising through liquid capture dust, viruses, and microplastics, then burst at the surface to launch clouds of microdroplets. By stacking sequential photographs, they traced the bubbles’ ascent and the parabolic arcs of droplets ejected into...

Life From Space? I Have Questions
Scientists analyzing samples from the carbon‑rich asteroids Ryugu and Bennu have identified all five nucleobases that form DNA and RNA, confirming that these fundamental organic molecules can arise through abiotic processes in space. The findings, published in Nature Astronomy, add...
Climate Issues in the 2026 Governor’s Race: Wildfire
California’s wildfire crisis has intensified, with 18 of the state’s 20 most destructive fires occurring in the past 25 years. The 2025 Los Angeles blazes alone killed at least 31 people and generated $95‑$164 billion in property and capital losses. Utilities are...

Paediatric Neurology and Therapeutic Carbohydrate Restriction
The article reviews emerging evidence that ketogenic metabolic therapy may benefit neonatal brain injury, preterm infants with mitochondrial disease, and children with autism spectrum disorder linked to PTEN mutations. Case reports demonstrate rapid lactate reduction and metabolic stabilization in a...
Let There Be Light
NASA’s Artemis II mission delivered striking images of the Moon’s far side, a region the agency prefers to call the “far side” rather than the “dark side.” The agency’s language reflects a scientific precision that contrasts with popular myth. The article...

A Neuroscience Protocol to Strengthen Memory and Accelerate Learning
A new neuroscience‑based protocol outlines how the timing of study sessions and sleep can dramatically boost memory retention. The guide emphasizes aligning learning with optimal brain states, leveraging sleep‑dependent consolidation, and incorporating movement and nutrition cues. It is positioned for...

🌊 Everything to Know About the Artemis II Mission
NASA's Artemis II mission lifted off on April 1 2026, sending four astronauts—Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canadian Jeremy Hansen—on a ten‑day lunar flyby aboard the Space Launch System. The flight marks the first crewed mission beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo 17 in...
First Human Data for Rubedo Life Sciences' Senolytic Drug RLS-1496
Rubedo Life Sciences reported preliminary Phase 1 data for RLS‑1496, the first topical GPX4‑modulating senolytic tested in humans. The double‑blind, vehicle‑controlled study in the EU evaluated safety, tolerability and early efficacy in plaque psoriasis, atopic dermatitis and photo‑aged skin. Results showed...
Hemispherian Initiates Phase 1/2a Clinical Trial of GLIX1 in Glioblastoma
Hemispherian AS announced the initiation of a first‑in‑human Phase 1/2a trial of GLIX1 in patients with recurrent glioblastoma and other high‑grade gliomas. GLIX1 is an oral, first‑in‑class small‑molecule TET2 activator that induces tumor‑selective DNA damage and has demonstrated potent preclinical efficacy,...

Entomol Partners with Purdue University on $2 Million USDA-Funded Avian Influenza Research
Entomol Products LLC has joined Purdue University and 1,4Group in a USDA‑funded, $2 million research effort to test hydrogenated catmint oil (HCO) as an antiviral fog for poultry facilities. The project, led by Purdue’s Dr. Ekramy Sayedahmed, will evaluate HCO’s ability...

Controlling Diabetes without Insulin Injections Thanks to New Implant
MIT researchers unveiled an implantable device that houses insulin‑producing islet cells, shielding them from immune attack and supplying oxygen via an on‑board generator. In mouse studies the encapsulated cells survived at least 90 days, continuously secreting enough insulin to maintain...

Cooking Once a Week Could Protect Your Brain
A six‑year Japanese cohort study of 10,978 adults aged 65+ found that cooking meals from scratch at least once a week lowered dementia risk by roughly 25‑30%. The protective effect was dramatically stronger—about 65‑70%—among participants with limited cooking skills, suggesting...

Vitamin E Enhanced PLA Filaments For 3D Printing
Researchers have developed PLA filament infused with vitamin E (α‑tocopherol) and evaluated its performance in fused‑filament fabrication (FFF). The antioxidant and mild plasticizer properties of vitamin E aim to reduce melt viscosity, lower printing temperatures, and improve ductility while potentially providing bioactive...

Artemis 2- Orion Lunar Flyby
NASA’s Artemis II mission delivered the first crew‑captured images during a lunar flyby. The photos reveal previously unseen regions, including impact craters, ancient lava flows, surface fractures, and a rare in‑space solar eclipse. Astronauts also recorded an Earthrise/Earthset and six meteoroid...
New Bond Formations Just Keep On Coming
A new Nature paper introduces a streamlined iterative sp³‑sp³ coupling using t‑BuLi‑activated pinacol boronates (B(pin)) and copper(I) catalysis. The protocol retains stereochemistry at the boron‑derived carbon and tolerates a broad range of functional groups, from silyl ethers to pyridines. The...

What We’ve Been Told About Saturated Fat, Fish, and Omega-3s May Need a Rethink
Dr. Tom Brenna, a veteran of U.S. dietary‑guideline panels, argues that two entrenched nutrition messages—capping saturated fat at 10% of calories and warning pregnant women against fish—are built on shaky evidence. He highlights how early studies conflated saturated and trans...

Obesity Pills: Orforglipron Outpaces Semaglutide: Next-Gen Oral GLP-1 Agonist Drives Superior Glycemic and Weight Control
The phase 3 ACHIEVE‑3 trial showed that oral orforglipron outperformed oral semaglutide in both glycemic control and weight loss for type 2 diabetes patients. At 52 weeks, the 36 mg dose reduced HbA1c by 1.91% versus 1.47% for semaglutide and achieved an 8.2% weight...

New Study Says I Was Wrong About NMN and NR?
A recent Norwegian crossover study reported that nicotinamide riboside (NR) raised blood NAD levels 2.3‑fold higher than nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) in six healthy adults. However, a larger 65‑participant Nature Metabolism trial found both NR and NMN roughly doubled NAD after...

Atherosclerosis - A Very Deep Dive Into Endothelial Health Genetic Pathways for Actionable Insights
The article presents a detailed three‑phase workflow for analyzing endothelial‑health genetic pathways, starting with evidence‑based SNP research, then producing a generic reference DOCX, and finally delivering a personalized report that maps genotype results to supplement and medication guidance. It mandates...

The Doctor Who Proved Handwashing Saves Lives Was Locked in an Asylum for It
In 1847 Ignaz Semmelweis, a physician at Vienna General Hospital, introduced mandatory handwashing in a chlorinated lime solution, slashing maternity ward mortality from 18% to 2%. His data‑driven approach proved that physicians were transmitting fatal infections to patients. The medical...

Why Life Seems to Speed Up as We Age (The Neuroscience of Time Compression)
The blog explains that the feeling of time speeding up with age is driven more by attention and memory processes than by biology. Neuroscientific research shows that new experiences, strong emotions, and focused attention create richer memory stores, making periods...
Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) U-Shaped Dose-Response Relation with Blood Glucose and Blood Pressure
A short‑term ubiquinol regimen of 200 mg per day for two weeks boosted strength and endurance while lowering perceived exertion in moderately trained adults. Muscle‑damage biomarkers also fell, indicating protective effects after strenuous exercise. Separate meta‑analyses suggest CoQ10 supplementation can cut...