Restoring Protein Recycling Reverses T-Cell Exhaustion in Mice
Scientists at UC San Diego discovered that impaired protein recycling drives T‑cell exhaustion in mice. Restoring the activity of specific E3 ligases—NEURL3, RNF149, and WSB1—reestablished proteostasis, cleared misfolded proteins, and revived T‑cell anti‑tumor function. The findings, published in Cell, suggest a new avenue for cancer immunotherapy and possibly neurodegenerative diseases. While the work is preclinical, it points to targeting proteostasis as a strategy to rejuvenate immune cells.
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Great African Seaforest — only Floating Bamboo Kelp Forest on the Planet
The Great African Seaforest stretches over 1,000 km along South Africa’s western coast, forming the world’s only floating bamboo kelp forest. Kelp ecosystems rival tropical rainforests in biodiversity and deliver more than $500 billion in global ecosystem services each year. Yet fewer...

Researchers Say This System of 7 Smart Rings Can Translate Sign Language
South Korean researchers have unveiled a wearable system of seven smart rings that captures finger and hand motions to translate American and International Sign Language into text. In tests the prototype recognized 100 distinct signs and could generate sentence‑level translations...
Seeing an Eclipse From Earth Is Awe‑inspiring—For Astronauts in Space, the Scene Was Even More Grand
On 6 April 2026 the Artemis II crew became the first humans to observe a total solar eclipse from space, viewing it while orbiting the Moon. The alignment blocked the Sun for about 54 minutes, a duration far longer than any Earth‑based totality, and...
Common Cholesterol Medications Do Not Alter Long-Term Dementia Risk
A massive target‑trial emulation study of more than 320,000 older adults found that statin use does not change long‑term risk of dementia. While statin users showed a 46% spike in dementia diagnoses during the first year after initiation, researchers attribute...
Battery-Free Skin-Conformal Wearable System Can Measure Electrocardiogram Signals
A research team led by Prof. Jerald Yoo at Seoul National University unveiled SkinECG, a skin‑conformal wearable that records electrocardiogram signals without a battery. The device uses an Orthogonal Energy Harvesting Network to wirelessly deliver power harvested from multiple on‑body...
PNNL Scientists Leverage AI to Optimize Glass Formulas for Liquid Radioactive Waste
Scientists at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have applied AI-driven machine learning with active learning to design optimized glass formulations for immobilizing Hanford’s liquid radioactive waste. The new models increase waste loading, enabling roughly 1% more waste per 20% loading increase...
Early Brain Regions Play Greater Role in Decision-Making, Challenging Traditional Neuroscience
University of Illinois researchers led by Prof. Yurii Vlasov discovered that decision‑making signals appear as early as the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) in mice navigating a virtual corridor. The study, published in PNAS, shows S1 is dynamically modulated by top‑down...
Perception of Humanness Is Affected by Speech Content
A Max Planck Institute study examined how linguistic content influences the perception of humanness in speech. Participants speaking German, Spanish and Turkish rated human and text‑to‑speech (TTS) voices, with sentences altered in syntax and semantics. The research found that acoustic...

Area 51 Just Had 17 Earthquakes in a Single Day
The United States Geological Survey logged 17 earthquakes near Area 51 over a 24‑hour period, ranging from magnitude 2.5 to 4.4 and originating roughly 2.5 miles underground. While conspiracy forums have linked the tremors to alien activity or clandestine nuclear detonations, geophysicists...

Surgery Still Outperforms GLP-1 Drugs in Terms of Heart Health
A Mayo Clinic study of more than 800 patients compared metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS) with GLP‑1 drugs such as semaglutide and tirzepatide. Surgery produced an average 28% weight loss versus 11% for medication and cut lifetime cardiovascular risk by...
A Familiar Voice Shapes How Zebra Finches Hear and Respond
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute discovered that zebra finches reply faster, more often, and with tighter timing to calls from familiar birds. Recordings from the HVC brain region showed that more than 70% of neurons respond to any call,...

2026 Will Be the Hottest Year on Record, Leading Scientist Predicts
Leading climate scientist predicts 2026 will become the hottest year on record, surpassing the 2024 benchmark of 1.5 °C above pre‑industrial levels, driven by accelerating anthropogenic warming and an anticipated strong El Niño. The El Niño is expected to develop in the second...

Amgen Launches Late-Stage Obesity Trial in Patients Who Switch From Rival Drugs
Amgen is initiating three Phase III trials for its long‑acting obesity injection MariTide, including a pivotal study that enrolls about 1,200 patients switching from Eli Lilly’s semaglutide or Novo Nordisk’s tirzepatide. The primary goal is a minimum 10% body‑weight loss after 68 weeks,...
Lumping Vs. Splitting Nutrients, Foods and Diet Patterns in Nutrition Research: Science Dialogue Mapping of Origins, Uses and Knowledge Gaps
A December 2024 colloquium examined how nutrition researchers decide to lump or split foods, nutrients, and dietary patterns. Using real‑time dialogue mapping, early‑career scientists identified six thematic areas—definitions, population heterogeneity, consumer behavior, policy messaging, frameworks, and measurement methods. The discussion...
Skull Microchannels Reveal Hidden Route for Brain Immune Defense
Researchers at Spain's CENIEH have quantified tiny vascular microforamina within adult human skulls, finding each cranium contains roughly 100 to 400 channels, most under 0.5 mm in diameter. Larger conduits, though fewer, transport a comparable share of blood and cluster in...
A New Way to Plan Trajectories to Asteroids
A research team led by Alessandro Beolchi at Khalifa University unveiled a hybrid trajectory‑planning method that blends the Circular Restricted Three‑Body Problem near Earth with the classic two‑body model for deep space. The approach exploits invariant manifolds at Earth‑Sun Lagrange...
Faster and Easier Ways to Diagnose Mpox: New Approaches Improve Detection
A review in *Trends in Biotechnology* outlines new point‑of‑care (POC) diagnostic platforms for Mpox, highlighting isothermal amplification, CRISPR‑based assays, biosensors and AI‑enhanced lesion imaging. The authors argue these tools can approach PCR sensitivity while eliminating the need for complex labs....

The Personality Trait Linked To 43% Lower Dementia Risk 43% (M)
A recent longitudinal study found that individuals scoring highest on conscientiousness were 43% less likely to develop dementia over a 14‑year period. The research followed roughly 7,000 adults aged 65 and older, tracking cognitive health alongside personality assessments. Researchers attribute...

How Does Your Brain Know a Cat Is a Cat?
Neuroscientists Lisa Feldman Barrett and Earl Miller argue that the brain constructs categories, such as “cat,” via predictive hypotheses before conscious perception. Their review in Nature Reviews Neuroscience links this predictive categorization to Barrett’s constructed emotion theory, suggesting the brain...
High-Intensity Exercise After Breast Cancer Surgery May Help Speed Recovery
A recent study presented to the American Society of Breast Surgeons found that high‑intensity resistance training can accelerate recovery after breast‑cancer surgery. Nearly 200 women who had lumpectomies, mastectomies or lymph‑node removals completed a three‑month program, lifting up to 200 lb....

Hamburg Students Build A Dark Matter Receiver
Undergraduate researchers at the University of Hamburg have constructed a compact cavity detector to hunt for axion dark matter, a candidate particle for the universe’s missing mass. Backed by a modest student grant and equipment from the MADMAX experiment and...
Secrets of the Bees: Revealing the Sneaky Genius of Nature’s Brightest Thinkers
The piece highlights recent experiments revealing bees’ sophisticated problem‑solving abilities, from rolling balls to locate sweet rewards to complex navigation across unfamiliar terrain. Researchers have documented honeybee foragers using sunlight, memory, and intricate dances to coordinate colony foraging and relocation...

Anna Grassellino Appointed to DOE Office of Science Advisory Committee
Anna Grassellino, Fermilab’s chief technology officer and associate laboratory director, has been appointed to the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science Advisory Committee (SCAC). She will also chair SCAC’s quantum subcommittee, guiding national efforts toward DOE’s 2028 target for...
Breast Cancer in Young Women: Rani Bansal, MD, Discusses Subtypes, Disparities, and the Importance of Self-Advocacy
In a recent AJMC interview, Duke oncologist Dr. Rani Bansal highlighted that breast cancer rates are climbing fastest among women under 50, driven primarily by estrogen‑receptor‑positive tumors. She noted that African‑American patients disproportionately develop aggressive triple‑negative disease, which limits targeted...

'One of the Most Rapid Transitions that I've Seen': NOAA Forecaster on How This Year's El Niño Could Shatter Records
NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center says an El Niño is likely to form as early as May, with a 90% probability of development by fall 2024. Forecasts show a 25% chance the event will be “very strong,” pushing sea‑surface temperatures more than...
New Lithium-Plasma Engine Passes Key Mars Propulsion Test
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory successfully tested a lithium‑plasma electric thruster delivering 120 kilowatts of power, a U.S. record and roughly 25 times the output of the Psyche mission’s Hall thrusters. The engine endured temperatures above 2,800 °C and demonstrated the durability needed...

F.D.A. Grants Early Access to Promising Drug for Pancreatic Cancer
On May 1, the FDA granted expanded‑access permission for daraxonrasib, an experimental oral drug from Revolution Medicines, allowing patients with previously treated metastatic pancreatic cancer to obtain the therapy outside clinical trials. The drug, taken as three pills daily, has produced...

Climate Change Is Altering When Water Is Available, Study Finds
A new study in Nature Water by Colorado School of Mines researchers shows climate change is reshaping not only the volume but also the timing of river flows across the United States. The research highlights that warmer years concentrate runoff...

A Very Popular Drink Is Linked To Lower IQ (M)
A recent UK study finds that regular consumption of beer is linked to a modest decline in IQ scores, slower reaction times, and a higher rate of cognitive mistakes. The research, which analyzed data from over 5,000 adults, measured brain...

Artemis III Aims for 'Late 2027' For Earth Orbit Demonstration
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announced that Artemis III will now target a late‑2027 Earth‑orbit rendezvous and docking test, shifting the mission’s primary objective to a low‑Earth‑orbit demonstration rather than a lunar landing. The shift aligns with commitments from SpaceX and Blue...
New-Onset Loneliness Triggers an Accelerated Drop in Cognitive Health
A new analysis of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing finds that older adults who first report loneliness experience a rapid acceleration in cognitive decline compared with peers who remain socially connected. Researchers matched 635 newly lonely participants with 1,900...
The Search for Aliens Levels Up
The upcoming Very Large Array in New Mexico, slated for 2035, will become the most sensitive radio SETI instrument, producing roughly 40 petabytes of data each month. Coupled with the Square Kilometre Array’s Phase 1 rollout, which will be five times more...

FDA Permits Expanded Access for Investigational Pancreatic Cancer Drug
The FDA issued a “safe to proceed” letter to Revolution Medicines, enabling an expanded access protocol for its experimental pancreatic cancer drug daraxonrasib. The request, received on April 28 and signed on April 30, targets patients with previously treated metastatic pancreatic ductal...

Space Force Wraps Decades-Long GPS Upgrade—And the Next One Is on Tap
The U.S. Space Force launched the final GPS III satellite, SV‑10, aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9, completing a 31‑satellite constellation that delivers three‑times‑greater positioning accuracy and eight‑times better jam resistance. The launch faced a launch‑provider switch and weather delay, but a new...
A Shortage of Synapses in Schizophrenia?
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute and the University of Münster linked synaptic deficits in patient‑derived neurons to cognitive impairment in schizophrenia. By pairing MRI, EEG and cognitive test results from over 400 participants with gene‑expression and synaptic density data...

Redo TAVR: Supra-Annular, Intra-Annular Valves Linked to Comparable Outcomes
A study of 172 redo transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR‑in‑TAVR) procedures from the international PANDORA registry shows comparable one‑year outcomes regardless of whether the initial and second valves are supra‑annular or intra‑annular. The median interval between the index and redo...

A New Type of Optical Chip Cuts Static Power While Enabling Electrical Reprogramming
Researchers at the University of Washington and MIT have created a programmable photonic integrated circuit called NEO‑PGA that eliminates static power consumption by using phase‑change materials. The chip can be electrically reprogrammed, retains its state without power, and is fabricated...
Dysregulation of the Immune System Differentiates Depression and Psychosis in Young Adulthood
International researchers published in JAMA Psychiatry that early‑stage depression and psychosis have completely different immune and brain signatures. Analyzing blood cytokines and MRI grey‑matter volumes from 678 participants in the EU‑funded PRONIA project revealed distinct inflammatory patterns and limbic‑region changes...
Reading the Sun’s Fireworks: How Flare Ribbons Reveal Hidden Solar Explosions
Solar physicists are using flare ribbons—bright, elongated structures that appear during solar eruptions—to uncover hidden solar explosions that traditional observations often miss. By tracking the motion and morphology of these ribbons, researchers can map magnetic reconnection sites and estimate the...
Roxana Zeraati Receives Klaus Tschira Boost Fund
Roxana Zeraati, a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, has secured the Klaus Tschira Boost Fund’s two‑year grant of €120,000 (about $131,000). The award will fund her investigation of how humans adapt decision‑making in dynamic, naturalistic settings using...

Most Models Predict El Nino May Last Until January 2027: IMD
The India Meteorological Department says most climate models now forecast an El Nino event that could linger until January 2026, curbing monsoon rains to about 92% of the long‑period average. The weakened southwest monsoon is expected to hit the Andaman and Nicobar...
Swift Creation of Conductive Organic Compounds via Mechanochemistry
Researchers at Nagoya University have unveiled a lithium‑mediated mechanochemical protocol that synthesizes 1,4‑dihydrodinaphthopentalenes (DHDPs) in just 15 minutes. The two‑step ball‑milling process operates under ambient air and uses less than 1 mL of THF, cutting solvent use by roughly 99% compared...
Russia Completes 1st Test, Suborbital, of Its New Soyuz-5 Rocket
Russia’s state‑run space agency announced that the Soyuz‑5 carrier rocket completed its first suborbital test flight on April 28, 2026, launching from Baikonur with a dummy payload. The vehicle is powered by what officials call the world’s most powerful liquid‑fuel...
Scientists Reveal Atomic Mechanism Behind Water-Induced Hydroxylation in CoOx Nanostructures
Scientists at the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics have uncovered how water vapor triggers both oxidative and reductive hydroxylation in cobalt‑oxide nanostructures. Using real‑time atomic‑scale imaging, they showed that water dissociatively adsorbs on CoO, converting it to Co(OH)₂, while in...
Study Finds That Nose Prominence Influences Facial Attractiveness, Reports Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery®
A May 2026 study in *Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery* used eye‑tracking to map how nose attractiveness shapes visual attention. Participants spent 0.81 seconds looking at unattractive noses versus 0.72 seconds on attractive ones, while eye fixation rose to 1.92 seconds when the nose was...
Physics-Guided Network Eliminates Honeycomb Artifacts in Fiber Endoscopy
Researchers have unveiled SGARNet, a physics‑guided neural network that eliminates honeycomb artifacts in lensless multi‑core fiber endoscopy. By analyzing the hexagonal core lattice’s frequency signatures, the system embeds a SpectralGate module that selectively filters artifact‑related spectral peaks while preserving image...

A Treasure Trove of Cambrian Fossils Rewrites the Story of Early Life
In 2026 paleontologists uncovered the Huayuan biota in southern China, a new Cambrian Lagerstätte containing 8,681 fossils across 153 species. More than half of the species are new to science, and the site dates to after the 513 million‑year‑old Sinsk mass‑extinction,...
Scientists Reveal Key to Intense Acidity in Fluorinated Aluminas
A research team at the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics used ultrafast magic‑angle spinning NMR to pinpoint the exact atomic structure responsible for the strong Brønsted acidity of fluorinated gamma‑alumina. They identified a unique F₁–Al_IV–μ₂–OH bridging hydroxyl site that appears...

Cockatoos Mimic Peers to Sharpen Adaptation Skills, Study Finds
A new ethological study reveals that cockatoos actively mimic the vocalizations of their flock mates, using peer imitation to broaden their acoustic repertoire and improve adaptive responses to environmental challenges. Researchers recorded over 2,000 calls across three Australian cockatoo populations,...