Tuesday, 7 April 2026

A new force of nature is reshaping the planet, study finds

 Human societies have not just adapted to the natural world. They have steadily learned how to transform it. Drawing on research from archaeology, ecology, anthropology, and evolutionary theory, Erle Ellis, professor of geography and environmental systems at the University of Maryland Baltimore County, explains how cultural practices have evolved to give humans extraordinary influence over the ecosystems that sustain them.

From early uses of fire to cook food and shape landscapes to modern systems like industrial agriculture, global trade, and rapidly growing cities, societies have developed powerful tools and institutions. These social and cultural advances have allowed humans to reshape the planet on a massive scale while improving their ability to survive and thrive.Understanding the Anthropocene and Human Impact

Ellis is a leading researcher studying the Anthropocene, the current geological age defined by the large-scale impact of human activity on Earth. He leads the Anthroecology Lab, which examines how human societies interact with ecosystems at every level, from local environments to the entire planet. His work focuses on how these relationships can be guided toward more sustainable outcomes.

In recent years, the concept of the Anthropocene has gained even broader attention across science and policy discussions. Ongoing research continues to reinforce the idea that human activity is now one of the dominant forces shaping Earth's systems, from climate patterns to biodiversity.

Progress for People, Costs for the Planet

Human innovation has brought major gains in health, longevity, and quality of life. At the same time, these advances have come with serious environmental costs. Climate change, species extinctions, and widespread pollution are all linked to the ways human societies have expanded and intensified their use of natural resources.

These challenges highlight the need for action. A better future depends on addressing environmental damage while maintaining the benefits that human progress has made possible.

Beyond Crisis Thinking Toward Collective Action

Ellis argues that focusing only on environmental crisis can miss a key point. The same collective abilities that allowed societies to transform the planet can also be used to improve it. History shows that when people cooperate, they can solve complex problems and reshape their surroundings in positive ways.

Rather than relying solely on narratives of limits or collapse, long-term solutions may depend on tapping into shared goals and collective ambition. Recent research continues to support this perspective, emphasizing that social cooperation and cultural change are essential for addressing global environmental challenges.The Power of Social and Cultural Systems

Ellis also highlights the limits of relying only on natural sciences to predict and manage the rapid changes seen in the Anthropocene. While scientific data is critical, it is social and cultural systems that have consistently enabled societies to adapt and succeed.

Institutions, shared values, and collective decision-making play a central role in shaping outcomes. These same systems will be crucial in building more sustainable relationships with the natural world.

If a better future is to be achieved, these capabilities must extend beyond human societies to include the broader web of life.

Reconnecting People and Nature

"Re-emphasizing the kinship relationships among all living beings -- our common evolutionary ancestry -- is a start, combined with new ways to connect people and nature, from remote sensing to webcams, to nature apps, to community conservation reserves, corridor networks, and ecotourism," shares Ellis. "Aspirations for a better future must also make peace with the past through restoration of Indigenous and traditional sovereignty over lands and waters."

This perspective aligns with growing global efforts to restore ecosystems, support Indigenous stewardship, and use technology to strengthen connections between people and nature.

A Future Shaped by Human Potential

Ellis stresses that the ability to create a more sustainable and equitable future is not new. The tools, knowledge, and social systems needed to drive change have existed for decades. What is often missing is widespread recognition and motivation to act.

The challenge now is to turn awareness into action. By recognizing the scale of human influence and embracing shared aspirations for a better world, societies can begin to use their collective power to shape a more positive future for both people and the planet.

Source: ScienceDaily

Monday, 6 April 2026

Scientists find hidden brain cells helping deadly cancer grow

 A team of researchers in Canada has identified a new way to slow the growth of glioblastoma, the most aggressive and currently incurable type of brain cancer, and they have also pointed to an existing drug that could potentially be used to treat it.

The study reveals that some brain cells, previously believed to only support normal nerve function, can actually assist glioblastoma in growing and spreading. These cells send signals that strengthen tumor cells. When scientists blocked this communication in laboratory models, tumor growth dropped significantly.

The findings also highlight a potential treatment opportunity. Researchers found that a drug already used to treat HIV might be able to interfere with this process, offering a new option for patients who currently have very limited treatment choices. Glioblastoma has a poor outlook, with survival often measured in months.

Study Details and Research Teams

The research was published Neuron and conducted by scientists at McMaster University and The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids). The co-first authors are Kui Zhai, a research associate in the Singh Lab at McMaster, and Nick Mikolajewicz, who was a postdoctoral fellow in the Moffat Lab at SickKids during the study.

"Glioblastoma isn't just a mass of cancer cells, it's an ecosystem," says Sheila Singh, co-senior author of the study and professor of surgery at McMaster University. "By decoding how these cells talk to each other, we've found a vulnerability that could be targeted with a drug that's already on the market," adds Singh, who is also director of the Centre for Discovery in Cancer Research at McMaster.

Oligodendrocytes and Tumor Communication

Scientists have long known that glioblastoma relies on networks of interacting cells to grow. Interrupting these connections can slow the disease. This study focused on identifying which specific brain cells are involved.

The team found that oligodendrocytes, which normally protect nerve fibers, can change their behavior and begin supporting tumor growth. These cells communicate with cancer cells through a defined signaling system, creating conditions that help the tumor survive and expand. When this signaling was blocked in lab models, tumor growth slowed considerably, showing how essential this interaction is.

Existing HIV Drug Offers New Hope

A key part of this signaling process involves a receptor called CCR5. This receptor is already targeted by an HIV drug known as Maraviroc. Because this medication is already approved and widely used, it could potentially be repurposed more quickly as a treatment for glioblastoma.

"The cellular ecosystem within glioblastoma is far more dynamic than previously understood. In uncovering an important piece of the cancer's biology, we also identified a potential therapeutic target that could be addressed with an existing drug. This finding opens a promising path to explore whether blocking this pathway can speed progress toward new treatment options for patients," said Jason Moffat, co-senior author of the study, senior scientist and head of the Genetics & Genome Biology program at SickKids.

Building on Earlier Discoveries

These findings build on earlier work by Singh and Moffat published in Nature Medicine in 2024, which showed that cancer cells can take advantage of pathways normally used during brain development to spread. Together, these studies point toward a new direction in glioblastoma research focused on disrupting the communication systems that tumors rely on.

The research was supported by the 2020 William Donald Nash Brain Tumour Research Fellowship and the Canadian Institutes for Health Research. Singh is a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Human Cancer Stem Cell Biology, and Moffat holds the GlaxoSmithKline Chair in Genetics & Genome Biology at The Hospital for Sick Children.

Source: ScienceDaily

Sunday, 5 April 2026

Scientists inject one tumor and watch cancer vanish across the body

 For more than two decades, scientists have explored a group of cancer drugs known as CD40 agonist antibodies. Early experiments suggested these treatments could strongly activate the immune system and help it destroy cancer cells. However, results in people were disappointing. Clinical trials showed only modest benefits, and the drugs often caused serious side effects such as widespread inflammation, dangerously low platelet levels, and liver damage. These reactions occurred even at relatively low doses.

In 2018, researchers led by Jeffrey V. Ravetch at Rockefeller University reported a potential breakthrough. The team redesigned a CD40 agonist antibody to improve its effectiveness while reducing harmful side effects. Their work relied on specially engineered mice that mimic key immune pathways found in humans. The encouraging findings suggested the therapy might work better in people if delivered differently.

The next step was testing the drug in patients.

Early Clinical Trial Shows Tumor Shrinkage and Remission

Results from the phase 1 clinical trial of the modified drug, called 2141-V11, have now been published in the journal Cancer Cell. Among the 12 participants in the study, tumors shrank in six patients. Two of those patients experienced complete remission, meaning their cancers disappeared entirely.

"Seeing these significant shrinkages and even complete remission in such a small subset of patients is quite remarkable," says first author Juan Osorio, a visiting assistant professor in Ravetch's Leonard Wagner Laboratory of Molecular Genetics and Immunology and a medical oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

Researchers also observed something unusual. The treatment did not only affect the tumors that were injected with the drug. Tumors located elsewhere in the body also shrank or were eliminated by immune cells.

"This effect -- where you inject locally but see a systemic response -- that's not something seen very often in any clinical treatment," Ravetch notes. "It's another very dramatic and unexpected result from our trial."

How the Engineered CD40 Antibody Works

CD40 is a receptor found on the surface of certain cells and belongs to the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor superfamily. These receptors are mainly present on immune cells. When CD40 is activated, it signals the immune system to mount a stronger response, helping trigger anti-tumor immunity and generate cancer-targeting T cells.

In 2018, Ravetch's team engineered the antibody 2141-V11 with support from Rockefeller's Therapeutic Development Fund, founded by trustee Julian Robertson and continued by the Black Family Foundation. The redesigned antibody binds tightly to human CD40 receptors and was modified to improve crosslinking by interacting with a specific Fc receptor. Laboratory studies showed the new design was about 10 times more effective at triggering an immune attack against tumors.

Researchers also changed how the drug was delivered. Traditionally, CD40 therapies were given through intravenous infusion. Because CD40 receptors exist throughout the body, many healthy cells would absorb the drug, leading to toxic side effects.

Instead, the team injected the treatment directly into tumors.

"When we did that, we saw only mild toxicity," Ravetch says.

These findings laid the groundwork for the phase 1 clinical trial, which aimed to determine a safe starting dose and better understand how the therapy works in patients.

Tumors Disappear in Some Patients

The trial involved 12 people with several types of metastatic cancer, including melanoma, renal cell carcinoma, and different forms of breast cancer. None of the participants experienced the severe side effects previously associated with CD40 drugs.

Six patients showed tumor shrinkage throughout the body. Two patients achieved a complete response, meaning all detectable cancer disappeared.

The two patients whose cancer vanished had melanoma and breast cancer, respectively. Both cancers are known for being aggressive and prone to recurrence.

"The melanoma patient had dozens of metastatic tumors on her leg and foot, and we injected just one tumor up on her thigh," Ravetch says. "After multiple injections of that one tumor, all the other tumors disappeared. The same thing happened in the patient with metastatic breast cancer, who also had tumors in her skin, liver, and lung. And even though we only injected the skin tumor, we saw all the tumors disappear."

Immune Cells Transform the Tumor Environment

Samples taken from treated tumors revealed how strongly the immune system responded.

Source: ScienceDaily

Saturday, 4 April 2026

A gene mutation may trap the brain in the wrong reality in schizophrenia patients

 A common feature of schizophrenia is difficulty using new information to understand the world. This challenge can make decision-making harder and, over time, may contribute to a disconnect from reality.

Researchers at MIT have identified a gene mutation that may play a key role in this problem. In experiments with mice, they found that the mutation disrupts a brain circuit responsible for updating beliefs when new information is received.The mutation occurs in a gene called grin2a, which had previously been flagged in large genetic studies of schizophrenia. The new findings suggest that targeting this brain circuit could help improve cognitive symptoms associated with the disorder.

"If this circuit doesn't work well, you cannot quickly integrate information," says Guoping Feng, the James W. and Patricia T. Poitras Professor in Brain and Cognitive Sciences at MIT, a member of the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, and the associate director of the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT. "We are quite confident this circuit is one of the mechanisms that contributes to the cognitive impairment that is a major part of the pathology of schizophrenia."

Feng and Michael Halassa, an associate professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at Tufts University, are the senior authors of the study, which appears in Nature Neuroscience. Tingting Zhou, a research scientist at the McGovern Institute, and Yi-Yun Ho, a former MIT postdoc, are the lead authors.

Genetic Clues and Schizophrenia Risk

Schizophrenia has a strong genetic component. In the general population, about 1 percent of people develop the condition. That risk increases to 10 percent if a parent or sibling is affected, and rises to 50 percent for identical twins.

Scientists at the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research at the Broad Institute have identified more than 100 gene variants associated with schizophrenia through genome-wide association studies. However, many of these variants are located in non-coding regions of DNA, making their effects difficult to interpret.

To address this, researchers used whole-exome sequencing, a method that focuses on protein-coding regions of the genome. This approach allowed them to identify mutations directly within genes.

By analyzing around 25,000 sequences from people with schizophrenia and 100,000 from control subjects, the team identified 10 genes where mutations significantly increase the risk of developing the disorder.

How a Gene Mutation Alters Brain Function

In the new study, researchers created mice carrying a mutation in one of those genes, grin2a. This gene produces part of the NMDA receptor, which is activated by the neurotransmitter glutamate and is commonly found on neurons.

Zhou then examined whether these mice showed behaviors similar to those seen in schizophrenia. While symptoms such as hallucinations and delusions (loss of contact with reality) cannot be directly modeled in mice, scientists can study related issues like difficulty interpreting new sensory information.

For years, researchers have proposed that psychosis may result from a reduced ability to update beliefs when new information becomes available.

"Our brain can form a prior belief of reality, and when sensory input comes into the brain, a neurotypical brain can use this new input to update the prior belief. This allows us to generate a new belief that's close to what the reality is," Zhou says. "What happens in schizophrenia patients is that they weigh too heavily on the prior belief. They don't use as much current input to update what they believed before, so the new belief is detached from reality."

Experiment Reveals Slower Decision-Making

To test this idea, Zhou designed a task where mice had to choose between two levers to receive a reward. One lever was low-reward -- mice needed six presses to get one drop of milk. The other offered a higher reward, delivering three drops per press.

At first, all mice preferred the high-reward option. Over time, however, the effort required for that option gradually increased, while the low-reward lever remained unchanged.

Healthy mice adjusted their behavior as conditions shifted. When the effort required for the high-reward option became comparable to the low-reward option, they eventually switched and stayed with the easier choice.

Mice with the grin2a mutation behaved differently. They continued switching back and forth between the options for longer and delayed committing to the more efficient choice.

Source: ScienceDaily

Friday, 3 April 2026

Deafness reversed: One injection restores hearing in just weeks

 A new study shows that gene therapy can significantly improve hearing in people born with congenital deafness or severe hearing loss. Researchers at Karolinska Institutet, working with hospitals and universities in China, treated ten patients and saw hearing improve in every case. The therapy was also well-tolerated. The findings were published in the journal Nature Medicine.

"This is a huge step forward in the genetic treatment of deafness, one that can be life-changing for children and adults," says Maoli Duan, consultant and docent at the Department of Clinical Science, Intervention and Technology, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden, and one of the study's corresponding authors.

Targeting the OTOF Gene

The trial included ten patients between the ages of 1 and 24 who were treated at five hospitals in China. All had a genetic form of deafness linked to mutations in a gene called OTOF. These mutations prevent the body from producing enough of the protein otoferlin, which is essential for sending sound signals from the inner ear to the brain.

Rapid Results After a Single InjectionTo address this, researchers used a synthetic adeno-associated virus (AAV) to deliver a working version of the OTOF gene directly into the inner ear. The treatment was given as a single injection through a membrane at the base of the cochlea known as the round window.The effects appeared quickly. Most patients began to regain some hearing within one month. After six months, all participants showed clear improvement. On average, the level of sound they could detect improved from 106 decibels to 52.

Strongest Gains Seen in Younger PatientsChildren showed the most dramatic responses, especially those between the ages of five and eight. One seven-year-old girl regained nearly full hearing and was able to have everyday conversations with her mother just four months after treatment. At the same time, the therapy also produced meaningful improvements in adult patients."Smaller studies in China have previously shown positive results in children, but this is the first time that the method has been tested in teenagers and adults, too," says Dr. Duan. "Hearing was greatly improved in many of the participants, which can have a profound effect on their life quality. We will now be following these patients to see how lasting the effect is."

Treatment Found To Be Safe

The therapy was shown to be safe and well-tolerated. The most commonly reported side effect was a decrease in neutrophils, which are a type of white blood cell. No serious adverse reactions were observed during the follow-up period of 6 to 12 months.

Expanding Gene Therapy for Hearing Loss

"OTOF is just the beginning," says Dr. Duan. "We and other researchers are expanding our work to other, more common genes that cause deafness, such as GJB2 and TMC1. These are more complicated to treat, but animal studies have so far returned promising results. We are confident that patients with different kinds of genetic deafness will one day be able to receive treatment."The research involved multiple institutions, including Zhongda Hospital at Southeast University in China. Funding came from several Chinese research programs as well as Otovia Therapeutics Inc., the company that developed the gene therapy and employs many of the researchers involved. A full list of disclosures and conflicts of interest is available in the published paper.

Source: ScienceDaily



Thursday, 2 April 2026

This tiny claw in a 500-million-year-old fossil just rewrote the origin of spiders

 After a long day of teaching, Rudy Lerosey-Aubril turned to a familiar task: preparing a Cambrian arthropod fossil for study. At first glance, the specimen looked typical for its age. But as he carefully removed surrounding material, something unusual appeared. Instead of an antenna, there was a claw.

"Claws are never in that location in a Cambrian arthropod," said Lerosey-Aubril, "It took me a few minutes to realize the obvious, I had just exposed the oldest chelicera ever found."

Oldest Known Chelicerate Identified

In a study published in Nature, Research Scientist Rudy Lerosey-Aubril and Associate Professor Javier Ortega-Hernández, Curator of Invertebrate Paleontology in the Museum of Comparative Zoology - both in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard - describe Megachelicerax cousteaui, a 500 million year old marine predator discovered in Utah's West Desert. It is now recognized as the earliest known chelicerate, a group that includes spiders, scorpions, horseshoe crabs, and sea spiders. This finding extends the known history of chelicerates by about 20 million years.

"This fossil documents the Cambrian origin of chelicerates," noted Lerosey-Aubril, "and shows that the anatomical blueprint of spiders and horseshoe crabs was already emerging 500 million years ago."

Detailed Anatomy of an Ancient Predator

Revealing the fossil's structure required patience and precision. Lerosey-Aubril spent more than 50 hours working under a microscope with a fine needle to expose its features. The animal measured just over 8 centimeters long and preserved a dorsal exoskeleton made up of a head shield and nine body segments.

These two regions had different functions. The head shield carried six pairs of appendages used for feeding and sensing. Beneath the body were plate-like respiratory structures that resemble the book gills seen in modern horseshoe crabs.

The First Clear Evidence of a Chelicera

The most striking feature is the chelicera, a pincer-like appendage that defines chelicerates. This structure separates spiders and their relatives from insects, which instead have antennae at the front of their bodies. Chelicerates rely on grasping appendages, often associated with venom delivery.

Despite the abundance of Cambrian fossils, no clear example of a chelicera from that period had been identified before. This discovery fills that gap and provides direct evidence of when these defining features first appeared.

Source: ScienceDaily

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

Saturn’s magnetic field is twisted and scientists just figured out why

 Saturn's magnetic field does not form a balanced, symmetrical bubble like Earth's. Instead, it is noticeably uneven, according to new research involving scientists from University College London (UCL). The study suggests this distortion is caused by the planet's rapid rotation along with the large amount of material it drags through space.

Planetary magnetic fields (magnetospheres) act as protective shields, blocking streams of highly charged particles from the solar wind. Saturn's magnetosphere is enormous, extending to more than 10 times the planet's diameter.

Cassini Study Pinpoints Saturn's Magnetic Cusp

The findings, published in Nature Communications, are based on six years of observations from NASA's Cassini mission. Researchers focused on identifying the exact position of Saturn's cusp -- a region where magnetic field lines bend back toward the poles and allow charged particles to funnel into the atmosphere.

The analysis showed that this cusp is consistently shifted to one side. When viewed from the Sun, it appears displaced to the right and is most often located between 1:00 and 3:00 (as it might appear on a clockface), rather than at 12:00 as seen on Earth.

Fast Rotation and Plasma Drive the Shift

Scientists believe this offset is linked to two key factors. Saturn spins extremely quickly, completing one rotation in just 10.7 hours. At the same time, it is surrounded by a dense "soup" of plasma (ionized gas), much of which comes from gases released by its moons, especially Enceladus.

Together, the rapid spin and this heavy plasma environment appear to pull the magnetic field lines sideways. Researchers note that further simulations will be needed to fully confirm this explanation.

Enceladus and the Search for Life

Saturn's surroundings are of growing interest because of Enceladus, a moon that ejects icy plumes from a subsurface ocean and may potentially support life. It is also a primary target for a proposed European Space Agency mission planned for the 2040s.

Co-author Professor Andrew Coates (Mullard Space Science Laboratory at UCL) said: "The cusp is the place where the solar wind can slip directly into the magnetosphere. Knowing the location of Saturn's cusp can help us better understand and map the whole magnetic bubble.

"A better understanding of Saturn's environment is especially urgent now as plans for our return to Saturn and its moon Enceladus start to be developed. These results feed into the excitement that we are going back there. This time we will look for evidence of habitability and for potential signs of life.

Source: ScienceDaily