Structural biology analysis of a Pseudomonas bacterial virus reveals a genome ejection motor
Researchers describe the full molecular structure of the phage DEV. DEV infects and lyses Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteria, an opportunistic pathogen in cystic fibrosis and...
Starving cancer cells of fat may improve cancer treatment
Cutting off cancer cells' access to fat may help a specific type of cancer treatment work more effectively, reports a new study. The findings...
Can cell phone signals help land a plane?
Researchers are taking experimental navigation technology to the skies, pioneering a backup system to keep an airplane on course when it cannot rely on...
Making it easier to verify an AI model’s responses
A new system helps human fact-checkers validate the responses generated by a large language model. By speeding validation time by 20 percent, the system...
Clinical trial for treating spinal cord injury using olfactory cell nerve bridges
Realizing a Phase I human clinical trial commencing to test the efficacy and safety of the transplantation of olfactory cell nerve bridges to treat...
Breakthrough toward solving electronics overheating problem
Researchers have successfully enhanced spin wave transfer efficiency for heatless information transmission.
Soft microelectronics technologies enabling wearable AI for digital health
Developing edge-computing and AI capabilities from wearable sensors enhances their intelligence, critical for the AI of Things, and reduces power consumption by minimizing data...
‘Drowning continent’: Western Australian coastline’s complex history
A study investigating the complex evolution of two iconic Western Australian landmarks, has traced their transformation over thousands of years and offers a glimpse...
How our gut cells detect harmful invaders
Researchers have discovered that GPR31, found in certain immune cells in the human gut, plays a key role in responding to bacterial metabolites and...
Going chiral: Breakthrough in synthesizing carbon nanotubes with precise chirality
Researchers have achieved a significant breakthrough in the synthesis of carbon nanotubes, also known as the 'king of nanomaterials.'