Ultimi Articoli

L’apprendimento automatico per l'individuazione dell’Alzheimer

L’apprendimento automatico per l'individuazione dell’Alzheimer

06 Novembre 2024

Uno studio condotto dal Cnr in collaborazione con l’Università di...

New criteria to avoid the over-diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease

New criteria to avoid the over-diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease

05 Novembre 2024

Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) is currently largely based on...

Brain Scans Reveal that Mindfulness Meditation to Reduce Pain Is Not a Placebo Effect

Brain Scans Reveal that Mindfulness Meditation to Reduce Pain Is Not a Placebo Effect

04 Novembre 2024

New findings reported in Biological Psychiatry show that mindfulness meditation...

Dove stanno i nostri ricordi: uno studio sulla memoria episodica

Dove stanno i nostri ricordi: uno studio sulla memoria episodica

04 Novembre 2024

I neuroni della corteccia entorinale laterale che si attivano al...

Artificial intelligence: a double-edged sword for the environment?

Artificial intelligence: a double-edged sword for the environment?

04 Novembre 2024

As artificial intelligence (AI) technology progresses, the energy demands of...

Dai supercicli sismici, informazioni preziose sui terremoti

Dai supercicli sismici, informazioni preziose sui terremoti

31 Ottobre 2024

Terremoto 2023 Antiochia - Turchia Dall’analisi sismica degli ultimi duemila...

Hot rivers: Climate change warms mountain streams across Europe

Hot rivers: Climate change warms mountain streams across Europe

30 Ottobre 2024

SLF study shows: Water temperatures in European mountain rivers have...

Sorghum's bioactive compounds could improve modern diets

Sorghum's bioactive compounds could improve modern diets

29 Ottobre 2024

Sorghum possesses unique lipid profiles and bioactive compounds that support...

Venerdì, 18 Ottobre 2024



Research published in Nature Genetics on Oct.14, by Yale Cancer Center researchers at Yale School of Medicine, found a higher concentration of a specific kind of DNA — extrachromosomal or ecDNA — in more aggressive and advanced cancers that could mark them as targets for future therapies.

Using data available from The Cancer Genome Atlas, the International Cancer Genomics Consortium, the Hartwig Medical Foundation, and the Glioma Longitudinal Analysis Consortium, the researchers considered more than 8,000 tumor samples, divided between newly diagnosed untreated tumors and those that had been through previous treatments such as chemotherapy, radiation, and others. They found significantly higher amounts of ecDNA in tumors from previously treated patients, leading to the theory that ecDNA might give a survival advantage to those tumors.

“Our research suggests that ecDNA helps tumors become more aggressive,” said senior author of the paper, Roel Verhaak, the Harvey and Kate Cushing Professor of Neurosurgery at Yale School of Medicine and member of Yale Cancer Center. “EcDNA has a distinct mechanism and plays an important role, not just for breast or lung cancer, but across many cancer types.”

Pubblicato in Scienceonline
Venerdì, 18 Ottobre 2024 10:49

The origin of most meteorites finally revealed



Understanding where shooting stars and meteorites come from is a question that scientists have been trying to answer since ancient times.
Until recently, only 6% of meteorite falls had been linked to their source.
A team led by scientists from CNRS, ESO, and Charles University has notably shown that 70% of all meteorite falls come from just three young asteroid families.
An international team led by three researchers from the CNRS1, the European Southern Observatory (ESO, Europe), and Charles University (Czech Republic) has successfully demonstrated that 70% of all known meteorite falls originate from just three young asteroid families. These families were produced by three recent collisions that occurred in the main asteroid belt 5.8, 7.5, and about 40 million years ago. The team also revealed the sources of other types of meteorites; with this research, the origin of more than 90% of meteorites has now been identified. This discovery is detailed in three papers, a first published on 13 September 2024 in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics, and two new papers to be published on 16 October 2024 in Nature.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign aerospace engineering Ph.D. student Nicolas Rasmont assembling his radar inferometry instrument in the lab.



Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign developed a new instrument to measure the density of the dust that kicks up when spacecraft thrusters interact with planetary surfaces as it lands. Because cameras and other optical equipment are blinded by dense dust clouds, the new instrument uses millimeter-wave radar in a new way to accurately measure the dust and debris.

“Other measurement techniques exist, but our instrument addresses a sort of ‘missing middle.’ It is applicable to particle clouds which are too dense for optical measurements but too thin for state-of-the-art opaque multiphase techniques like X-rays or MRI. It is also capable of several thousands of measurements per second,” said Nicolas Rasmont, Ph.D. student in the Department of Aerospace Engineering. “Our instrument uses a radar to generate waves with a wavelength of 3.8 mm, just over an eighth of an inch. The wave travels through a cloud of particles, then is reflected, then captured back by our instrument to detect the presence of the particles.”

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Medicina

L’apprendimento automatico per l'individuazione dell’Alzheimer

L’apprendimento automatico per l'individuazione dell’Alzheimer

06 Novembre 2024

Uno studio condotto dal Cnr in collaborazione con l’Università di...

Paleontologia

Evoluzione: scoperte le prime fasi dell’evoluzione del ribosoma all’origine della vita sulla Terra

Evoluzione: scoperte le prime fasi dell’evoluzione del ribosoma all’origine della vita sulla Terra

24 Ottobre 2024

Un team interdisciplinare di scienziati di cui fa parte l’Università degli Studi di Milano...

Geografia e Storia

Dai supercicli sismici, informazioni preziose sui terremoti

Dai supercicli sismici, informazioni preziose sui terremoti

31 Ottobre 2024

Terremoto 2023 Antiochia - Turchia Dall’analisi sismica degli ultimi duemila anni in Turchia orientale,...

Astronomia e Spazio

Cygnus X-3: un tesoro nascosto nella galassia

Cygnus X-3: un tesoro nascosto nella galassia

05 Settembre 2024

Su Nature Astronomy un nuovo studio pone nuova luce sulla comprensione...

Scienze Naturali e Ambiente

Riscaldamento globale: entro 2100 pericolo estinzione per alghe e foreste marine

Riscaldamento globale: entro 2100 pericolo estinzione per alghe e foreste marine

29 Ottobre 2024

Se non ci saranno interventi per mitigare subito le emissioni di...

 

Scienzaonline con sottotitolo Sciencenew  - Periodico
Autorizzazioni del Tribunale di Roma – diffusioni:
telematica quotidiana 229/2006 del 08/06/2006
mensile per mezzo stampa 293/2003 del 07/07/2003
Scienceonline, Autorizzazione del Tribunale di Roma 228/2006 del 29/05/06
Pubblicato a Roma – Via A. De Viti de Marco, 50 – Direttore Responsabile Guido Donati

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