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Ancient ice core could help explain mysterious shift in Earth’s ice ages
Record-setting Antarctic archive reveals sharp swings in carbon dioxide 1 million years ago
Magic mushroom compound shows promise against cocaine addiction
Small study that prioritized Black and low-income participants yields “remarkable” results
Hepatic expression of APOE3 Christchurch mitigates APOE4-related Alzheimer's disease pathologies in mice
The ε4 allele of apolipoprotein E (APOE4) is the strongest genetic risk factor for sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) and exacerbates AD-related pathologies. Identifying strategies to mitigate the pathogenic effects of APOE4 remains a critical challenge in the field of AD research. The rare APOE3 Christchurch (APOE3Ch) variant has been suggested to be potentially protective against AD. Our study investigated whether hepatic expression of APOE3Ch could mitigate APOE4-associated AD pathologies. We...
The Role of Neurogenesis in Neurodegenerative Diseases: Mechanisms and Interventions
Neurogenesis is the process by which new neurons are generated from neural stem cells (NSCs) and neural progenitor cells (NPCs). Impairment in this process can lead to cognitive and memory deficits, among other issues. Research indicates that defective neurogenesis is closely associated with neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), and Huntington's disease (HD). These conditions not only affect a significant global population but also exert profound...
HuR coordinates systemic aging through platelet infiltration
Aging involves morphological and functional changes across different organs, but how these changes are linked among the different organs remains to be elucidated. Here, we uncover a central role of platelets in systemic aging. In aged mice, the levels of platelet-secreted pro-inflammatory factors (PSPF) increased greatly in the serum and platelets, leading to a diffuse increase of platelet infiltration in the brain, liver, lung, kidney, and aortic root. The RNA-binding protein HuR/ELAVL1, a...
ZAT-DNA enables DNA data storage with molecular-layer non-replicability
Deoxyribonucleic acid provides unmatched information density and longevity for data storage, yet its easy amplification by polymerase chain reaction enables unauthorized replication at negligible cost. We introduce ZAT-DNA, which encodes information in patterns of canonical adenine and noncanonical 2-aminoadenine. As DNA polymerases cannot distinguish adenine from 2-aminoadenine, polymerase-based amplification erases these patterns, enforcing molecular-layer non-replicability intrinsic to the...
Elimination of senescent cells with senolytic drugs as adjunctive host-directed therapy reduces tuberculosis progression in mice
By eliciting lung necrosis, which enhances aerosol transmission, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) sustains its long-term survival as a human pathogen. In studying the human-like necrotic granuloma lesions characteristic of Mtb-infected B6.Sst1S mice, we found that lung myeloid cells display elevated senescence markers: cell cycle arrest proteins p21 and p16, the DNA damage marker γH2A.X, senescence-associated β-galactosidase activity, and senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). These...
FILM: mapping organellar metabolism by mid-infrared photothermal-modulated fluorescence
Metabolism unfolds within specific organelles in eukaryotic cells. Lysosomes are highly metabolically active organelles, and their metabolic states dynamically influence signal transduction, cellular homeostasis and organismal physiopathology. Despite the importance of lysosomal metabolism, a method for its in vivo measurement is currently lacking. Here we report a fluorescence-detected mid-infrared photothermal microscope (FILM) implemented with optical boxcar demodulation, artificial...
Determinants of malnutrition in older hospitalized patients: a prospective multicenter study with the DoMAP model
CONCLUSION: The DoMAP model provides a structured framework for capturing the diverse etiologies of malnutrition in older patients. This study emphasizes the multifactorial nature of malnutrition in hospitalized patients, with low intake and poor appetite emerging as predominant drivers.
Realization of a spin glass in a two-dimensional van der Waals material
Recent advances in van der Waals materials have sparked renewed interest in the impact of dimensionality on magnetic phase transitions. Although ordered magnetic phases have been demonstrated to survive in the two-dimensional (2D) limit, the quest for a spin glass with quenched magnetic disorder in lower dimensions has proven elusive. Here, we provide evidence of a spin glass emerging from randomly distributed Fe atoms in Fe(3)GeTe(2) (FGT). ac magnetic susceptibility displays a strong frequency...
Aging and the narrowing of scientific innovation
Aging researchers and the removal of retirement policies yield decreased disruptive innovation in science.
Association of Combined Lifestyle Behaviors With Healthspan in Older Adults
CONCLUSION: In healthy older adults, adherence to a healthy lifestyle was associated with a greater likelihood of surviving free from disability and dementia and was prospectively linked with a prolonged healthspan and a compression of morbidity, highlighting its potential importance in promoting healthy aging.
A conserved regulatory architecture stabilizes cellular senescence across distinct triggers in human fibroblasts
Cellular senescence arises through replicative exhaustion or acute stress, yet whether these distinct triggers share a reproducible transcriptional organization has remained unresolved. Seven public human fibroblast RNA-seq datasets were integrated across both trigger types, moving from differential expression through Gene Ontology and Reactome enrichment to protein-protein interaction network embedding within a single harmonized framework. Both triggers converged on concordant repression of...
What to do with the passengers on the cruise ship hit by hantavirus?
Past studies of Andes virus offer scant evidence on transmission risks, and have sparked debate
Early-career researchers do more ‘disruptive’ science than veterans
Erratum for the Report “The Antibacterial Lectin RegIIIγ Promotes the Spatial Segregation of Microbiota and Host in the Intestine”
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6798, May 2026.
A molecule with half-Möbius topology
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6798, May 2026.
Rapid directed evolution guided by protein language models and epistatic interactions
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6798, May 2026.
Competitive reactivity drives size- and composition-focusing in multimetallic nanocrystals
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6798, May 2026.
Tuft dendrites in frontal motor cortex enable flexible learning
Science, Volume 392, Issue 6798, May 2026.