Article Highlights
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 26-May-2026 09:15 ET (26-May-2026 13:15 GMT/UTC)
Synthetic biology platform targets antibiotic residues in water
Higher Education PressThis article highlights a new synthetic biology platform developed by researchers at South China Agricultural University. The platform, known as FerTiG, is designed to degrade tetracycline residues in various aquatic environments. By integrating multiple functional modules into a single enzyme assembly, FerTiG offers enhanced stability and efficiency for antibiotic removal. The study demonstrates its effectiveness in different water matrices and confirms its biosafety through ecological and in vivo tests. This work presents a potential solution for addressing antibiotic pollution in water sources.
- Journal
- Engineering
Researchers detail how neurotransmitter receptors in the fly brain change during development
Howard Hughes Medical InstituteNew proteomics research is enabling scientists to decipher how neurotransmitter receptors behave and change as an organism develops. The new work could help scientists better understand the formation and function of synapses—the junctions where communication signals are passed between neurons.
- Journal
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Sailing towards a cleaner future: direct air capture-assisted sustainable fuel solution in the maritime sector
Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural University- Journal
- Carbon Research
From hand to machine: Making muscadines harvest-ready through science
Nanjing Agricultural University The Academy of Science- Journal
- Horticulture Research
Mitochondrial move-in: Could relocating proteins help diagnose Alzheimer’s?
Salk Institute- Journal
- Redox Biology
When fats go wrong: how lipid metabolism drives Alzheimer’s disease
Tsinghua University PressFor decades, Alzheimer’s disease (AD) research has focused on its visible villains—amyloid plaques and tau tangles. But beneath the surface, another player may be quietly steering the disease’s course: lipid metabolism. Lipids, the essential substances that build and fuel the brain, are proving to be powerful influencers of disease progression. When their balance falters, harmful proteins accumulate, synapses weaken, and inflammation spreads. This new review pulls together cutting-edge findings that link genetic risk factors, like APOE4, to disrupted cholesterol transport, faulty fat storage, and poor lipid clearance—unveiling a hidden layer of AD biology and pointing toward untapped therapeutic strategies.
- Journal
- Aging Research
From wounds to roots: Inside the cellular rebirth of poplar plants
Nanjing Agricultural University The Academy of ScienceHow do plants regenerate roots from scratch after being wounded? In this study, scientists used spatial transcriptomics and time-series gene expression analysis to trace poplar root regeneration from its earliest stages.
- Journal
- Horticulture Research
The p15 protein is a promising immunogen for developing protective immunity against African swine fever virus
Higher Education PressThis study investigates the potential of the African swine fever virus (ASFV) p15 protein as an immunogen for developing vaccines against ASF. Researchers identified a high-affinity neutralizing antibody, 4E2, against p15 and elucidated the structure of the p15-4E2 complex. They also constructed two types of virus-like particles (VLPs) displaying p15 and evaluated their protective efficacy in pigs challenged with a moderately virulent ASFV strain.
- Journal
- Protein & Cell