Machine learning potential-driven insights into pH-dependent CO₂ reduction
Peer-Reviewed Publication
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 9-Jul-2025 21:11 ET (10-Jul-2025 01:11 GMT/UTC)
Researchers at the Nano Life Science Institute (WPI-NanoLSI), Kanazawa University, report in Small, a weekly peer-reviewed scientific journal covering nanotechnology, published by Wiley-WCH, Germany, how short peptides self-assemble linearly on atomically-thick solid surfaces, such as graphite and MoS2. The research addresses a longstanding challenge in materials science: understanding the complex, sequence-specific interactions between peptides and solid substrates, and the critical role of local hydration structures in guiding nanoarchitecture formation. This work offers new strategies for integrating biomolecules with advanced materials in future bioelectronics and sensor devices.
A groundbreaking study led by a global research consortium offers new hope for patients with mycetoma, a neglected tropical disease. Researchers using an insect model and transcriptome analysis have unravelled the mechanism of iron regulation between host tissue and the mycetoma grain, a fungal mass characteristic of the disease. This discovery illuminates how the causative fungus invades and develops these protective grains within subcutaneous tissue, paving the way for new drug development and less invasive treatment strategies beyond surgical removal, potentially reducing the burden on patients significantly.
Researchers at the Nano Life Science Institute (WPI-NanoLSI), Kanazawa University observe and model how the enzyme ADAR1 interacts with double-stranded RNA, which may be useful for future cancer treatment strategies.
Baby talk, more formally referred to as infant-directed speech (IDS), often differs from adult-directed speech (ADS) in both pitch and vocabulary. The existing scientific evidence for the presence of vowel hyperarticulation in IDS is conflicting, however. Researchers recently performed a meta-analysis of all existing IDS vowel hyperarticulation research studies and found that the exaggeration of vowels in IDS is present in at least 10 different languages.