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When mitochondria grow abnormally long, leaked RNA may activate anti-tumor immune responses

Researchers from the University of Osaka have demonstrated that mitochondrial hyperfusion, when induced by low levels of DRP1 or cellular stress, activates an immune response through the RIG-I–MAVS pathway. Dependent on the involvement of the BAX protein, the release of mitochondrial RNA into the cytosol enhanced natural killer cell cytotoxicity and reduced tumor growth in a xenograft model. The findings, published in Cell Reports, provide new possibilities for cancer research and treatment.

Mitochondria are constantly dividing and fusing within our cells, reshaping themselves to keep up with the cell’s changing needs. Sometimes, though, things go awry, and mitochondria can grow abnormally long. Are these long mitochondria harmful, or might they serve a purpose?

Mitochondria also act as signaling centers, helping the cell sense and respond to trouble. When mitochondria are hyperfused, for example in the stressed, abnormally long state described above, they release their genetic material into the cytosol, where the cell treats it as a warning sign in the same way it would treat a virus.

New Wright-Patt supercomputer calculates in a day what would take average laptop 500 years

Wright Patterson Air Force Base has a new advanced problem solver for future military systems and weapons. It’s called the Flyer, named in honor of Wilbur and Orville Wright and their research in aerodynamics.

The Flyer is the Pentagon’s latest supercomputer. It has more than 186,000 cores able to process millions of advanced calculations in a few seconds.

David Shahady, deputy director of the Air Force Research Laboratory’s Digital Capabilities Directorate, equated the abilities of this unit to a pop-culture sci-fi character.

String theory and M theory part 1

Here I discuss two experiment and Gluon plasma, Gluon dipole. My lectures note is taken from professor Leonar Suskind string theory books and his lecture series. Professor Leonard Suskind books and his lecture grow my string theory knowledge. I have great respect🙏 to him. My main target to grow curiosity on science.

#stringtheory #quantumphysics #advancedphysics #astrophysics #m_theory.

#Leonard_suskind.

#blackhole

Time is a Processing Delay

I show how the time dilation derived in special relativity by assuming an abstract concept of malleable time, can be derived in a more mechanistic manner by assuming that the cosmos is like a simulation \& time is a processing delay.

I had this idea while playing minecraft with my son — every time I approached a large villager-town the PC slowed down and I thought \.

Generation Ships — The Hardest Part Is Not Distance

Could a generation ship actually stay alive long enough to cross interstellar space?

This video treats the generation ship as a closed-world survival problem, not as a simple starship fantasy. Distance matters, but the deeper challenge is whether air, water, food, spare parts, radiation shielding, population health, institutions, and culture can survive for centuries inside one sealed system.

The question is not only whether a ship can arrive. It is whether the human world inside it can remain repairable, governable, stable, and alive across generations that never chose the mission themselves.

00:00:00 — Opening.
00:02:05 — Distance Solves Nothing Yet.
00:08:55 — A Sealed World Begins.
00:17:23 — Air And Water Must Cycle.
00:25:38 — Food Becomes Ship Ecology.
00:34:11 — Closure Never Fully Closes.
00:42:44 — Radiation Taxes Every Generation.
00:51:31 — Time Multiplies Tiny Failures.
00:59:50 — Spare Parts Become Culture.
01:08:34 — Population Is A System.
01:17:26 — Genes Drift Under Constraint.
01:26:02 — Children Inherit The Burden.
01:34:47 — Institutions Must Outlive Founders.
01:43:58 — Arrival Can Still Fail.
01:51:57 — Faster Helps But Never Saves.
02:00:20 — Alive Is More Than Arrival.

Meet EcoBOT: The Autonomous Lab Standardizing Plant-Microbe Research

To harness biological systems (plants and microbes) for next-generation energy production and advanced materials, researchers are looking to beneficial plant-microbe interactions. Because these are complex systems, it has proven difficult to reproducibly control exactly which microbes are present. And, subtle differences in materials, methods, or even the hands of the researchers themselves can lead to inconsistent results. This makes it difficult to replicate previous work, significantly slowing the leap from scientific discovery to practical application.

Researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) are overcoming this bottleneck by addressing a multi-layered challenge: building reliable physical hardware, engineering accurate visual sensors, and developing predictive algorithms. Their solution, EcoBOT, stands out from typical plant phenotyping facilities by integrating these distinct components into a reliably automated workflow under strictly sterile conditions.

EcoBOT takes specialized growth chambers, called EcoFABs, and integrates them with machine-learning tools that autonomously guide the discovery cycle. This system uses advanced imaging to regularly scan the entire plant—from the tips of its leaves to the bottom of its roots. By using Gaussian Process models and AI analysis tools, it can quickly analyze and model this visual data to calculate the most informative next steps. This directs the automated hardware to determine exactly how plants adapt to environmental stressors, establishing the crucial microbe-free baseline needed to eventually study plant-microbe interactions and engineer better bioenergy crops.

Graphene can hold multiple states of superconductivity, a new study finds

The researchers discovered the multiple superconducting states in atomically thin exfoliations of graphite, known as graphene. Specifically, graphene is a single-atom-thin sheet of carbon atoms arranged precisely in a microscopic lattice. The team made its discoveries in samples of rhombohedral graphene, which is a natural structure within graphite consisting of a stack of four or five graphene layers.

Interestingly, the researchers found that several of the new superconducting states in rhombohedral graphene are able to persist in the presence of a magnetic field, which normally kills superconductivity.

And in a further surprise, these superconducting states even get stronger when exposed to a magnetic field.

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