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A sudden change and recovery in the magnetic environment around a repeating fast radio burst
Science, Volume 391, Issue 6782, Page 280-284, January 2026.
Careful science is valuable, regardless of results
Science, Volume 391, Issue 6782, Page 246-246, January 2026.
The branching legacies of America’s past
Science, Volume 391, Issue 6782, Page 245-245, January 2026.
Illegal miners have forced Peru’s oldest environmental research station to suspend work
Staff at the Panguana biological research station have received death threats
What’s below Antarctica’s ice? New map provides clearest view yet
Technique could improve models of how ice flows, bolstering predictions of sea level rise
Scientists turn cells’ most mysterious structures into spies on genetic activity
Enigmatic ‘vaults’ can be engineered to eavesdrop on RNA, aiding cancer studies and more
On a Galápagos island, a ‘restoration project on steroids’
A multimillion-dollar plan aims to undo centuries of destruction on islands made famous by Darwin
In fish, low doses of common pesticide speed aging and death
Polluted lakes and lab experiments highlight harms of chronic exposure to chlorpyrifos
Chinese telescope in Antarctica probes uncharted heavenly radiation
Terahertz instrument at Dome A, world’s driest spot, traces the faint glow of gases beyond other telescopes’ reach
Stability of non-canonical nucleic acid structure as a potential modulator of cell fate
Cellular morphological changes occur during cell life and diseases, such as senescence and cancer. Although the cellular conditions should be varied with the morphology changes, there have been no attempts to understand the cellular morphological changes by focusing on the intracellular molecular environment and elucidating the behaviour of nucleic acids. Nucleic acids can form hierarchical secondary and higher-order structures due to intermolecular interactions and other factors. Additionally,...
Visualization and quantification of rDNA instabilities in mammalian cells and mouse models
Ribosomal DNA (rDNA) encodes the 18S, 5.8S, and 28S rRNA, accounting for ∼70% of cellular transcription. Despite its essential role and links to cancer and aging, quantifying rDNA instability in mammals remains challenging due to its repetitive organization and inherent heterogeneity. Here, we developed a murine rDNA FISH probe and genomic tools tailored for laboratory mouse strains. The results confirmed rDNA cluster locations, revealed substantial inter- and intra-strain as well as...
NSMF modulates replication stress to facilitate colorectal cancer progression
Cancer cells precisely modulate replication stress to sustain genomic instability without triggering lethal DNA damage, yet regulators enabling this delicate balance remain largely unknown. Here, we identify N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor synaptonuclear signaling and neuronal migration factor (NSMF) as a novel and critical regulator of replication stress in colorectal cancer (CRC). NSMF expression is significantly elevated in CRC tissues and correlates closely with elevated replication stress. In...
Selection for Postponed Senescence in Drosophila melanogaster Reveals Distinct Metabolic Aging Trajectories Modifiable by the Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitor Lisinopril
Aging is accompanied by profound changes in energy metabolism, yet the underlying drivers and modulators of these shifts remain incompletely understood. Here, we investigated how life-history evolution shapes metabolic aging and pharmacological responsiveness by leveraging Drosophila melanogaster lines divergently selected for reproductive timing. We measured organismal oxygen consumption rate and performed untargeted metabolomics in young and old flies of both sexes from long-lived "O" lines...
A head start: Bone channels shape meningeal immunity
Immune cells from the skull marrow reach the meninges through bone channels. In this issue of Immunity, Eme-Scolan and colleagues show that these channels form neonatally and can be remodeled to alter immune access to the brain's borders. Their work suggests that the skull is a developmental checkpoint for neuroimmune defense, potentially shaping vulnerability or resilience across the lifespan.
Effect of cognitive and motor dual-task on stability and variability of walking in younger and older adults
Dual-task walking, performing a secondary task while walking, challenges attentional and motor resources and has been linked to increased fall risk. While cognitive dual tasks are most often studied, physical (e.g., load carriage) and "combination" tasks such as obstacle crossing may also impact gait. Whole-body angular momentum and its variability provide sensitive markers of locomotor stability. We investigated how dual-task type influences gait mechanics and stability in younger and older...
Exploring the molecular intersections of osteoporosis and sarcopenia: An integrated bioinformatics and experimental validation
CONCLUSIONS: These findings highlight PAQR4 as a potential biomarker and a candidate molecule of interest for osteosarcopenia.
Regulating zinc nucleation and growth with low-surface-tension electrolytes for practical aqueous zinc metal batteries
Rechargeable zinc metal batteries are promising for large-scale energy storage due to their low cost and high safety, but their development is seriously hindered by the dendritic growth and side reactions of zinc metal anodes. To address this challenge, we report here that rational design of low-surface-tension electrolytes can enable dense nucleation and fine-grained growth of zinc. This low-surface-tension strategy leads to high stability of the solid-electrolyte interface, dendrite-free...
Author Correction: Factor XII signaling via uPAR-integrin beta1 axis promotes tubular senescence in diabetic kidney disease
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How ageing harms the body's response to raging infection
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Intermittent hypobaric pressure induces selective senescent cell death and alleviates age-related osteoporosis
Senescent cell accumulation contributes to aging, and their clearance represents an effective anti-aging strategy. Current senolytic strategies focus on drug-mediated senescent cell clearance, but it is unknown whether a hypobaric condition can induce senescent cell death. Here we show that hypobaric pressure (HP) at -375 mmHg without hypoxia induces cells to undergo lysosome-dependent cell death (LDCD). Mechanistically, we unveil that HP activates transmembrane protein 59 (TMEM59) to induce...