Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Whaling’s Shadow: Bowheads in 30s #researchawards #biophotonics #biotechnology #biology


 Past intensive whaling pushed bowhead whales to the brink of extinction, drastically reducing their population over centuries. Known for their incredible lifespan and resilience in the Arctic, these whales are still recovering today. However, slow reproduction rates, climate change, increased shipping, and human activities continue to threaten their future.

#BowheadWhales #SaveTheWhales #MarineConservation #OceanLife #ArcticWildlife #ClimateChangeImpact #ProtectMarineLife #WildlifeConservation #EndWhaling #OceanEcosystem #SustainableFuture #NatureProtection #Biodiversity #EnvironmentalAwareness

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Dinos hatched eggs less efficiently than modern birds, researchers show

 What do we really know about how oviraptors—bird-like but flightless dinosaurs—hatched their eggs? Did they use environmental heat, like crocodiles, or body heat from an adult, like birds? In a new Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution study, researchers in Taiwan examined the brooding behavior and hatching patterns of oviraptors. They also modeled heat transfer simulations of oviraptor clutches and compared hatching efficiency to modern birds. To do so, they experimented with a life-sized oviraptor incubator and eggs.



"We show the difference in oviraptor hatching patterns was induced by the relative position of the incubating adult to the eggs," said senior author Dr. Tzu-Ruei Yang, an associate curator of vertebrate paleontology at Taiwan's National Museum of Natural Science.

"Moreover, we obtained an estimate of the incubation efficiency of oviraptors, which is much lower than that of modern birds," added first author Chun-Yu Su, who attended Washington High School in Taichung when the research was conducted.

Building a dinosaur

The reconstructed oviraptor, Heyuannia huangi, lived between 70 and 66 million years ago in what today is China. Estimated to be around 1.5 meters long and weighing around 20 kg, it built semi-open nests made up of several rings of eggs.

The incubating oviraptor's trunk was made from polystyrene foam and wood for the skeletal frame and cotton, bubble paper, and cloth for the soft tissue. Eggs were molded from casting resin. In the two clutches used in the experiments, eggs were arranged in double-rings based on real oviraptor clutches.

"Part of the difficulty lies in reconstructing oviraptor incubation realistically," said Su. "For example, their eggs are unlike those of any living species, so we invented the resin eggs to approximate real oviraptor eggs as best as we could."

When the team ran experiments to find out if clutch attendance of a brooding adult or different environmental circumstances may have impacted hatching patterns, they found that in colder temperatures, where a brooding adult attended the clutch, the eggs' temperatures in the outer ring differed by up to 6°C, which could have resulted in asynchronous hatching, a pattern where eggs in the same nest hatch at different times.

In warmer conditions, the difference in egg temperatures in the outer ring was just 0.6°C, suggesting that oviraptors living in warmer conditions may have exhibited a different pattern of asynchronous hatching because they could use the sun as an additional, powerful heat source.

"It's unlikely that large dinosaurs sat atop their clutches. Supposedly they used the heat of the sun or soil to hatch their eggs, like turtles. Since oviraptor clutches are open to the air, heat from the sun likely mattered much more than heat from the soil," Yang explained.

Better hatchers?

The team also investigated how oviraptor incubation efficiency compares to that of modern birds. Most birds use thermoregulatory contact incubation (TCI), where adults sit directly on the eggs to transfer heat.

TCI requires three prerequisites—the adult bird must be in contact with every egg, be the main heat source, and maintain all eggs within a constrained temperature range—which oviraptors didn't fulfill. For example, their egg arrangement prevented the adult from making full contact with all eggs in the clutch.

"Oviraptors may not have been able to conduct TCI as modern birds do," said Su. Instead, these dinosaurs and the sun may have been co-incubators—a less efficient incubation behavior than that displayed by modern birds.

Yet, the combination of adult incubation and an ambient heat source—perhaps a behavioral adaptation associated with the evolution from buried to semi-open nests—isn't necessarily worse.

"Modern birds aren't 'better' at hatching eggs. Instead, birds living today and oviraptors have a very different way of incubation or, more specifically, brooding," Yang pointed out. "Nothing is better or worse. It just depends on the environment."

  • The team pointed out that their findings are specific to the reconstructed nest and are limited by the fact that today's climate does not resemble the Late Cretaceous climate, which may have impacted the results. Oviraptors also exhibited a longer incubation period than modern birds.

    Yet, the study advances our understanding of oviraptor brooding strategies through innovative approaches. It represents an important bridge between physics-based simulations and paleontological interpretations, potentially enabling paleontologists to investigate topics for which approaches were limited until now.

    "It also truly is an encouragement for all students, especially in Taiwan," concluded Yang. "There are no dinosaur fossils in Taiwan, but that does not mean that we cannot do dinosaur studies."

    World Biophotonics Research Awards
    Visit: biophotonicsresearch.com
    Nominate Now: https://biophotonicsresearch.com/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awarde

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Why a Pink Bug Hides Better Than You Think #biophotonics #biotechnology #researchawards


 A fascinating discovery by scientists reveals that a bright pink insect uses its striking color not to stand out, but to blend into its natural environment. This surprising form of camouflage helps the insect avoid predators by mimicking pink flowers or plant structures in its habitat. The study highlights how evolution can produce unexpected survival strategies, where bold colors serve as effective disguise rather than warning signals. Such findings deepen our understanding of adaptation, camouflage, and biodiversity in the natural world.

#BrightPinkInsect #Camouflage #NatureDiscovery #Evolution #Biodiversity #WildlifeScience #InsectAdaptation #NatureResearch #ScientificDiscovery #AnimalCamouflage #Ecology #BiologyNews #NatureInnovation #EnvironmentalScience #WildlifeStudy

Thursday, March 12, 2026

AI Just Built a Logic Gate Inside Cells?!#biophotonics #biomedical#scienceawards #researchawards


 Researchers have developed a groundbreaking RNA-based synthetic NAND switch in living cells using artificial intelligence. This innovative genetic circuit mimics the logic of a digital NAND gate—one of the fundamental building blocks of computing—by combining two riboswitches that respond to specific molecules. The system turns gene expression off only when both molecular inputs are present, while remaining active otherwise.

#SyntheticBiology #RNAEngineering #AIBiology #GeneticCircuits #RNATechnology #Biocomputing #GeneRegulation #Bioengineering #MolecularBiology #Biotechnology #AIinBiology #Riboswitch #LivingCells #BioInnovation #SystemsBiology #GeneticSwitch #BiophotonicsResearch #NextGenBiotech #ScientificBreakthrough #FutureMedicine

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Your Telomeres Are Breaking?!#scienceawards #biophotonics #researchawards

Recent discoveries show that telomere breaks—damage at the protective ends of chromosomes—can trigger chaotic chromosome mutations within cells. Telomeres normally safeguard genetic material, but when they break or become dysfunctional, chromosomes can fuse, rearrange, or shatter during cell division. This process may lead to complex genomic alterations known as chromosomal instability, which is often linked to cancer development and rapid tumor evolution. #TelomereBreaks #ChromosomeMutation #GenomicInstability #CancerResearch #Genetics #MolecularBiology #CellBiology #GenomeScience #DNARepair #BiomedicalResearch #LifeScience #ChromosomeDamage #GenomicResearch #Biotechnology #ScientificDiscovery
 

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Why simulating an entire cell cycle took years, multiple GPUs and six days per run

 By simulating the life cycle of a minimal bacterial cell—from DNA replication to protein translation to metabolism and cell division—scientists have opened a new frontier of computer vision into the essential processes of life. The researchers, led by chemistry professor Zan Luthey-Schulten at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, present undefined in the journal Cell.




The team simulated a living cell at nanoscale resolution and recapitulated how every molecule within that cell behaved over the course of a full cell cycle. The work took many years: vast computer resources, large experimental datasets, a suite of experimental and computational techniques and an understanding of the roles, behaviors and physical interactions of thousands of molecular players.

The researchers had to account for every gene, protein, RNA molecule and chemical reaction occurring within the cell to recreate the timing of cellular events. For example, their model had to accurately reflect the processes that allow the cell to double in size prior to cell division.

To make the task more manageable, the team used a living "minimal cell" developed at the J. Craig Venter Institute in California. The version of the cell used in the new study, undefined—"Syn3A" for short—is a modified bacterium with a pared-down genome that carries only the genes needed to replicate its DNA, grow, divide and perform most of the other functions that make life possible.

"This is a three-dimensional, fully dynamic kinetic model of a living minimal cell that mimics what goes on in the actual cell," Luthey-Schulten said.

"Such a comprehensive undertaking was only possible through the combined efforts of a host of collaborators at the U. of I. as well as Harvard Medical School, where we systematically modeled the essential metabolism and other subcellular networks through a series of publications starting in 2018."

Building and validating the minimal cell

The Syn3A cell has fewer than 500 genes, all of which reside on a single circular strand of DNA. The laboratories of study co-authors Angad Mehta, a professor of chemistry at the U. of I., and Taekjip Ha, of Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, generated additional experimental data that allowed the team to accurately simulate and validate numerous aspects of cell function.

"Most importantly, their work revealed the extent of DNA replication and that Syn3A's cell division is symmetrical," Luthey-Schulten said.

Both factors guided and validated the simulations performed by Zane Thornburg, a postdoctoral fellow at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology and the Cancer Center at Illinois, and Andrew Maytin, a graduate student in Luthey-Schulten's lab.

Like other bacterial cells, Syn3A has no nucleus. Every molecule that comprises and sustains it is either a component of its outer membrane, is transported into it from outside the cell or is assembled in the cytoplasm.

The cell is so jam-packed with molecular players that, when creating high-resolution cartoons and animations of their computer simulations, the researchers had to render some of the components invisible. Making all the cellular proteins invisible, for example, allowed the scientists to see how Syn3A's chromosome threads through the cell's crowded interior.

Some processes were more computationally expensive than others, the team discovered. For example, Maytin realized that chromosome replication was slowing the whole simulation to a crawl, nearly doubling the time it took to capture the whole cell cycle.

He determined that efficiently simulating the cell's DNA replication process required its own dedicated graphics processing unit, while another GPU handled all other cellular dynamics. This allowed the team to simulate the full, 105-minute cell cycle in just six days of computer time.

Overcoming the hurdles of 3D simulation

Thornburg and Maytin struggled with the challenge of simulating cellular events occurring at the same time in various parts of the cell.

"I can't overstate how hard it is to simulate things that are moving—and doing it in 3D for an entire cell was … triumphant," Thornburg said. "One of the last big hurdles that Andrew and I had to solve was understanding how the membrane and the DNA talk to one another when both are moving."

While the simulated cell cycle has its limitations—this was not an atom-by-atom simulation but instead averaged the dynamics of individual molecules—it yielded a surprisingly accurate accounting of the timing of cellular processes.

In repeated simulations involving individual cells with slightly varying start conditions, the simulated cell cycle occurred, on average, within two minutes of the real-world cell cycle, Thornburg said. The work was repeatedly guided and tested against actual experimental outcomes, a process that allowed the scientists to refine their simulations.

A new window into living systems

The ability to accurately capture the ever-changing conditions within a living cell opens a new window on the foundations of living systems, Luthey-Schulten said.

"We have a whole-cell model that predicts many cellular properties simultaneously," she said. "If you want to know what's going on, say, in nucleotide metabolism, you can also look at what's going on in DNA replication and the biogenesis of ribosomes. So the simulations can give you the results of hundreds of experiments simultaneously."

Study co-authors also include Illinois chemistry alumnus Benjamin Gilbert and John Glass, who leads the J. Craig Venter Institute Synthetic Biology Group.

This work was conducted at the National Science Foundation's Science and Technology Center for Quantitative Cell Biology at the U. of I. Luthey-Schulten is also a professor of physics and a professor in the Beckman Institute at the U. of I. The research was conducted using the Delta advanced computing and data resource. Delta is a joint effort of the U. of I. and its National Center for Supercomputing Applications.

World Biophotonics Research Awards
Visit: biophotonicsresearch.com
Nominate Now: https://biophotonicsresearch.com/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awarde

Monday, March 9, 2026

Plant mitochondria actively pull oxygen from chloroplasts, researchers discover

 A new study from the University of Helsinki reveals how plant mitochondria draw molecular oxygen away from chloroplasts, an interaction not previously documented. The discovery sheds new light on how plants regulate oxygen inside their tissues, with implications for understanding plant metabolism and stress acclimation. The research, led by Dr. Alexey Shapiguzov (Ph.D., Docent) from the University's Centre of Excellence in Tree Biology on the Viikki campus, has been undefined in Plant Physiology.


Oxygen as a central factor in plant life

Oxygen gas is central to plant metabolism, growth, stress acclimation and immunity. Recent research at the University of Helsinki has shown that undefined triggers wound healing in plants. Yet, despite its importance, scientists still lack an understanding of how oxygen levels inside plant tissues are controlled.

In plant cells, oxygen dynamics are dominated by two organelles: mitochondria that consume oxygen during respiration, and chloroplasts that produce oxygen as a by-product of photosynthesis.

While both cellular respiration and photosynthesis are well studied, the exchange of oxygen between mitochondria and chloroplasts remains largely unexplored.

Genetically modified Arabidopsis enables the study of mitochondrial functions

To investigate this gap, the research team examined undefined lines of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana that carry mitochondrial defects. These defects switch on alternative respiratory enzymes, boosting mitochondrial oxygen consumption.

Genetically modified lines were found to carry two key features:

  1. Increased mitochondrial respiration lowered oxygen levels in tissues.
  2. undefined in these plants became resistant to methyl viologen, a chemical that diverts electrons from photosystem I to oxygen, producing reactive oxygen species.

Under low-oxygen conditions achieved by exposing the plants to nitrogen gas, the electron transfer to oxygen dropped dramatically. This indicated that methyl viologen was simply running out of its required substrate: oxygen.

Mitochondria 'suck out' oxygen from chloroplasts

The results suggest a previously undocumented interaction: when stressed, mitochondria can reduce oxygen levels inside chloroplasts by consuming more of it. This "oxygen drain" affects photosynthesis and metabolism of reactive oxygen species, which can help plants adjust to environmental changes.

According to Dr. Shapiguzov, to our knowledge, this is the first evidence that mitochondria influence chloroplasts through intracellular oxygen exchange. It adds a new layer to our understanding of how plants regulate energy metabolism and cope with stress.

New insights regarding plant resilience

By understanding how respiration and photosynthesis interact through oxygen exchange, scientists can better understand plant energy metabolism and responses to environmental changes such as day-night transitions or flooding. This can help develop new crop varieties.

The discovered interaction also provides new ways of measuring and imaging plant physiology, which can be helpful in breeding and in early stress detection.

World Biophotonics Research Awards
Visit: biophotonicsresearch.com
Nominate Now: https://biophotonicsresearch.com/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awarde

Whaling’s Shadow: Bowheads in 30s #researchawards #biophotonics #biotechnology #biology

  Past intensive whaling pushed bowhead whales to the brink of extinction, drastically reducing their population over centuries. Known for t...