'Oxford university ended its relationship with the Sacklers on Monday after a Financial Times investigation into its continued ties with the wealthy family led academics and students to call for sweeping reforms.'
https://www.ft.com/content/28ea87bb-f873-4693-a767-5dc79c5b3b92
'The task force acknowledged that dense breasts can increase a woman’s risk of breast cancer and that certain race or ethnicity groups are at higher risk for early-onset breast cancer. But it failed to issue more individualized recommendations for these groups, instead calling only for more research. Black women under 50, for example, die of breast cancer at twice the rate of white women under 50 in the United States. We have known this for decades, and it is unacceptable.'
#BreastCancer
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/16/opinion/breast-cancer-screening.html
Last chance to register for the ICOR webinar where you can learn about updates on collaborative open research initiatives:
✳️an update from the eLife on their new publishing model,
✳️a report on the Gates Foundation study on fair and equitable pricing for publishing,
✳️an overview from the Pew Charitable Trusts' Evidence Project,
& more
Join ICOR tomorrow 10:30am – 12pm ET
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZItcO2qrj4oEtfk_CFus4rYIqX0awNwh0pk#/registration
EXO1 to the rescue: How does #EXO1 save #BRCA1-deficient cells?
The team of Profs. H. van Attikum & S.M. Noordermeer shows that BRCA1-deficient cells are unable to overcome damage if EXO1 is deleted. #preprint
#preLight by Jennifer Ann Black: https://prelights.biologists.com/highlights/exo1-mediated-dna-repair-by-single-strand-annealing-is-essential-for-brca1-deficient-cells/
"A monolithic group of scientists will bring many of the same preconceived notions to their work. But a group of many backgrounds will bring different points of view that decrease the chance that one prevailing set of views will bias the outcome. This means that scientific consensus can be reached faster and with greater reliability. It also means that the applications and implications will be more just for all. How is this a threat to scientific rigor and the merit of discoveries?"
https://www.science.org/content/blog-post/it-matters-who-does-science#.ZF4ty3LYhwN.twitter
'These results indicate that NRF2 regulates cardiac metabolic reprogramming by stimulating the diversion of glucose into the PPP, thereby providing cardiac protection during stress by generating NADPH and providing nucleotides to prevent stress-induced DNA damage.'
#Preprint
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.05.12.540342v1?med=mas
People seem to believe that Omicron is milder or that people have protection from prior infections, but a new study suggests children's risk of #LongCOVID is not reduced with reinfections. “12-16% infected with Omicron met the research definition of long COVID at 3 and 6 months after infection, with no evidence of difference between cases of first-positive and reinfection... substantial numbers of CYP (children & young people) are likely to be impacted.”
https://www.jpeds.com/article/S0022-3476(23)00311-6/fulltext
"A monolithic group of scientists will bring many of the same preconceived notions to their work. But a group of many backgrounds will bring different points of view that decrease the chance that one prevailing set of views will bias the outcome. This means that scientific consensus can be reached faster and with greater reliability. It also means that the applications and implications will be more just for all. How is this a threat to scientific rigor and the merit of discoveries?"
https://www.science.org/content/blog-post/it-matters-who-does-science#.ZF4ty3LYhwN.twitter
'I don’t know if you’ve ever been to a zoning-board meeting where folks are debating affordable housing. It shows you just how much work and effort and force goes into defending segregation. The folks who show up for those meetings are really not representative of the broader community. They tend to be whiter, more affluent, more likely to be homeowners. It’s this interesting thing wherein a democratic process has an undemocratic outcome, because representation in this case is a defense of the status quo.'
'Juba’s scientific contributions are his greatest legacy to the modern world. He is not only our best witness to that now-extinct elephant; drawing on his doctor’s name (Antonius Euphorbus), he christened the group of plants still known as Euphorbia (the red-leaved poinsettia is the most easily recognized of these), which was discovered on one of his expeditions into the Atlas Mountains. Chances are he’s behind the name of the Canary Islands too, taken from the big dogs (canes, in Latin) found on one of his expeditions there.'
Obesity and #covid19 vaccination.
"Here we focus on individuals with severe obesity (those at highest risk). We conducted a prospective, longitudinal study that allowed us to demonstrate that, although initial and peak responses were similar in individuals with severe obesity and individuals with normal weight, there was accelerated decline in antibody levels over time that correlated with increased frequency of hospitalization and mortality from breakthrough infections."
🦠 Although #CellDeath is essential for defense against viral infections, it can also lead to severe disease. Manolis Pasparakis @UniCologne explains more
👉 https://bit.ly/42jdlHS
@HorizonMagEU @CECAD_ @UniCologne_D7
#inflammatorydiseases #immunology https://www.youtube.com/shorts/q2UtCbyhWUg
🐦🔗: https://n.respublicae.eu/ERC_Research/status/1658004326172991488
PRO-Simat: Protein network simulation and design tool | https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2001037023001757?via%3Dihub #proteomics
'It might surprise you to hear that cycling is actually more popular than driving in Tokyo — it accounts for 17 percent of journeys, though the Japanese do not make as much of a big deal out of it as the Dutch do. But walking and public transport dwarf both sorts of vehicles.'
https://heatmap.news/economy/tokyo-anti-car-pedestrian-paradise?ref=thebrowser.com#
Issue 10
Highlight on mitochondrial ATP synthase as ATP consumer
Two methods for creating bespoke aneuploid cells
Phospholipids and IFITM3-mediated antiviral immunity
Redox regulation of EGFR phosphatase RPTPγ
Cover by Marzia Munafo for Yasin Dagdas and colleagues
https://www.embopress.org/toc/14602075/2023/42/10
'Following the paper’s publication in Cretaceous Research, an online campaign with the hashtag #UbirajaraBelongsToBrazil called for the specimen’s return, citing palaeontological colonialism, in which scientists from wealthy nations take fossils from low- and middle-income nations. Because it is the only known specimen of its kind and is well preserved, researchers consider the Ubirajara fossil to be a holotype — a gold-standard specimen used to describe a new species'
‘Labour warns’ in the headline is what makes it art:
"Some NHS staff need to “get over cultural sniffiness” about profit motives to work with pharmaceutical and tech companies to reverse the steep drop in UK clinical trials, shadow health secretary Wes Streeting has said."
https://www.ft.com/content/801fa00e-335c-4b54-b507-4d4b497f73e0
I've worked on all of science, from B cells to T cells.
https://fellowsherpa.com