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01 / 05
Top Genome Scientists to Map Invertebrate DNA Sequence

The Guardian | Scientific Research

Top Genome Scientists to Map Invertebrate DNA Sequence

“Mark Blaxter leads the Sanger Institute’s Tree of Life programme, a project that sequences species’ DNA to understand the diversity and origins of life on Earth. But far more importantly, Blaxter and his team are superfans of our invertebrate of the year competition and have offered to map the genome sequence of whoever wins this year. …

Blaxter’s team, which voted for the 2024 winner, the common earthworm, has already sequenced many creatures on the 2025 shortlist. The tiny tardigrade? Done. The dark-edged bee fly, a twerking impostor that drops sticky egg bombs? Done. The evolutionary scandal that is the common rotifer has also laid bare its genetic code. So has a close relative of the tongue-biting louse, a nominee whose name only begins to describe the horror of its antics.

The shortlisted tardigrade, Milnesium tardigradum, is the size of a speck of dust. When hunkered down it completely dries out, yet its cells and DNA are preserved. In this shrunken ‘tun’ state, the animal needs no food or water and can endure DNA-shattering radiation. Rehydrate the little ball and the creature carries on as before. ‘It’s amazing to watch,’ says Blaxter, who has witnessed the transformation on a microscope slide. “It expands, comes back to life and starts crawling around. It only takes about 25 minutes.

The tardigrade’s secret is written in its genes, but there is more reason to read the code than curiosity. Understanding the process could help researchers make other biological material impervious to extreme conditions. Think vaccines that don’t need refrigeration, or astronauts that are shielded against space radiation. ‘There are biotechnology applications hidden inside all these little organisms’ genomes that we think are going to be really valuable as we move to a post-oil economy and start thinking about looking after the planet better,’ said Blaxter.”

From The Guardian.

Nature | Scientific Research

Remarkable New Enzymes Built by Algorithm

“Computer algorithms have designed highly efficient synthetic enzymes from scratch, with minimal need for tedious hands-on experiments to perfect them. The resulting enzymes catalyze a chemical reaction that no known natural protein can execute, achieving a reaction rate and efficiency similar to naturally occurring enzymes.

The proteins, described on 18 June in Nature, open the door to an era in which bespoke enzymes can be rapidly designed to facilitate a variety of reactions.

‘They’re remarkable,’ says Sílvia Osuna, a computational chemist at the University of Girona in Spain, who was not involved in the study. ‘It’s very hard to computationally design a highly efficient enzyme.'”

From Nature.

New Scientist | Scientific Research

Buried Cables Are Revealing Earth’s Interior in Incredible Detail

“Much of the internet, phone systems, television and other high-speed communications relies on a world-girdling network of fibre-optic cables. By one estimate, more than 4 billion kilometres of such cables snake beneath and between cities; the longest ones span oceans. Normally, we don’t think much about this physical network, happy just to receive the calls, web pages and cat videos it transmits. But more and more, the cables themselves are becoming a valuable source of information about the planet…

In Istanbul, these fibres have revealed potentially life-saving information about how to protect people and infrastructure against future earthquakes. Elsewhere, they are allowing researchers to measure the subsurface hum of London’s bustle, track the rumbling of Iceland’s volcanoes and map the upper reaches of our planet’s mantle. This new view of the underground has the potential to transform our understanding of the world’s constant vibration.”

From New Scientist.

Science | Science & Technology

New “Game Changer” Sonar Tool for Mapping the Sea Floor

“An emerging sonar technology that scans the sea floor at centimeter-scale resolution is dazzling researchers with its potential. Commercial synthetic aperture sonar (SAS) devices, originally developed by the military to identify explosive mines, are now being deployed by scientists such as Yizhaq Makovsky, a marine geoscientist at the University of Haifa. When he first saw how SAS instruments could pick out the bumps of tiny seafloor burrows, he says, ‘We realized this was a game changer.’

Only a Rhode Island–size patch of the world’s deep-sea floors has been observed up close, according to a study published on 7 May in Science Advances. That imaged area is likely to grow with the adoption of SAS, which can efficiently reveal fine details in wide swaths of the sea floor, unmasking its biology and geology. It could also be crucial in upcoming fights between deep-sea miners and the environmentalists who seek to limit seafloor exploitation.”

From Science.

MIT News | Scientific Research

AI Predicts Location of Virtually Any Protein Within a Human Cell

“A protein located in the wrong part of a cell can contribute to several diseases, such as Alzheimer’s, cystic fibrosis, and cancer. But there are about 70,000 different proteins and protein variants in a single human cell, and since scientists can typically only test for a handful in one experiment, it is extremely costly and time-consuming to identify proteins’ locations manually.

A new generation of computational techniques seeks to streamline the process using machine-learning models that often leverage datasets containing thousands of proteins and their locations, measured across multiple cell lines. One of the largest such datasets is the Human Protein Atlas, which catalogs the subcellular behavior of over 13,000 proteins in more than 40 cell lines. But as enormous as it is, the Human Protein Atlas has only explored about 0.25 percent of all possible pairings of all proteins and cell lines within the database.

Now, researchers from MIT, Harvard University, and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard have developed a new computational approach that can efficiently explore the remaining uncharted space. Their method can predict the location of any protein in any human cell line, even when both protein and cell have never been tested before.”

From MIT News.