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Signaling molecule may regulate proteins in wheat plants

Triggers for food crop growth are complex and new research by South Australian plant scientists is investigating one way wheat responds to common stresses such as poor soil health......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgSep 1st, 2022

Researchers warn against weakening Clean Air Act regulations

A new commentary published in the American Journal of Public Health has found that power plants' use of air pollution control devices saved up to 9,100 lives and up to $100 billion in health costs in 2023. These estimates reveal the substantial healt.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 25th, 2024

Study shows weak external electric fields may protect crops from infection

Research from Dr. Giovanni Sena's group in the Department of Life Sciences highlights an intriguing method to help protect plants from pathogen attacks using weak electric fields......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 25th, 2024

AuthenticID360 blocks AI-generated IDs during digital onboarding

AuthenticID released AuthenticID360, its new holistic identity verification platform. AuthenticID360 delivers robust verification and risk signaling capabilities, including a 2-second response time for identity transactions. A unified solution for co.....»»

Category: securitySource:  netsecurityRelated NewsOct 25th, 2024

Understanding the influence of specific gene mutations on starch properties in barley

Cereals such as rice, wheat, maize, and barley are essential in the human diet and have various uses in the food industry. Their suitability for different industrial applications depends on the properties of their grains. The major component of these.....»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxRelated NewsOct 23rd, 2024

An elegant switch regulates production of protein variants during cell division

Our cells contain thousands of proteins that have gone largely undetected and unstudied until recent years: these are variants of known proteins, which cells can make when their protein-building machinery interacts differently with the same stretch o.....»»

Category: topSource:  pcmagRelated NewsOct 23rd, 2024

Newly developed methodology breaks molecular symmetry to back one theory about life"s origin

The vast majority of organic molecules (based on a carbon structure) are not flat, but have a three-dimensional geometry. Various results can be obtained depending on the way the atoms are arranged inside each molecule. In some cases, a molecule and.....»»

Category: topSource:  pcmagRelated NewsOct 23rd, 2024

Column: Industry may need to think about Musk-Trump relations

We don't know why Elon Musk has become Donald Trump's biggest supporter, but he could be looking to regulate the regulators......»»

Category: topSource:  autonewsRelated NewsOct 23rd, 2024

China automakers to double overseas capacity to dodge tariffs, study finds

Chinese carmakers have built and commissioned complete manufacturing plants across nine countries, with annual capacity of 1.2 million units as of 2023, a figure set to more than double to 2.7 million in over a dozen countries by 2026, Bloomberg foun.....»»

Category: topSource:  autonewsRelated NewsOct 23rd, 2024

New chemical treatment reduces number of plant pores that regulate water loss

Researchers from Nagoya University Institute of Transformative Biomolecules (WPI-ITbM) in Japan and their colleagues have identified and derivatized a chemical compound that effectively regulates the density of stomata in model plants. Stomata are cr.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 23rd, 2024

Enhancing recombinant protein expression in lettuce

Recombinant proteins are crucial in pharmaceutical and other industries. A production method uses plants as hosts in transient protein expression systems. Researchers at the University of Tsukuba developed a technique to increase recombinant protein.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 22nd, 2024

Researcher finds special proteins are key when antibiotic resistance spreads

Antibiotic resistance is a growing public health problem globally. The problem is exacerbated by the fact that some bacteria that have become resistant to antibiotics have the ability to spread that resistance to other bacteria via secretion systems......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 22nd, 2024

Photosynthesis is under threat in an increasingly warm world, says researcher

The basis of all life on Earth is photosynthesis. So, what happens if it is disrupted? Today, advanced measurement tools can reveal how climate change is affecting plants' ability to process the energy from sunlight......»»

Category: topSource:  informationweekRelated NewsOct 21st, 2024

Study combines woodchips and biochar to clean water of pharmaceuticals, nutrients

What happens to ibuprofen after it eases your throbbing headache? Like many pharmaceuticals, it can remain in an active form when our bodies flush it out. That's a problem, because although wastewater treatment plants are good at reducing nutrient po.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 21st, 2024

How plants compete for light: Researchers discover new mechanism in shade avoidance

Plants that are close together do everything they can to intercept light. This "shade avoidance" response has been extensively researched. It is therefore even more remarkable that researchers from the laboratory of Molecular Biology at Wageningen Un.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 21st, 2024

Nitrogen-fixing plant diversity declines with over-fertilization, study finds

Anthropogenic nitrogen deposition and climate change can reduce the competitive advantage of nitrogen-fixing plants, leading to reduced diversity of these plants in a community. Surprisingly, changes in temperature and aridity do not contribute to th.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 21st, 2024

Loss of "nitrogen fixers" threatens biodiversity, ecosystems, say biologists

Mississippi State University is part of a European-American collaboration studying how human activities, like fertilizer use and pollution, are impacting nitrogen-fixing plants which are crucial for maintaining healthy ecosystems by adding nitrogen t.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 21st, 2024

Materials of the future can be extracted from wastewater

A group of researchers is on the way to revolutionizing what biomass from wastewater treatment plants can be used for. Biopolymers from bacteria can be a sustainable alternative to oil-based products, and phosphorus and other minerals can also be har.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 18th, 2024

Q&A: A faster way to identify drought-resistant plants for crop breeding research

Climate change is making droughts more common and more severe—which makes research into developing drought-resistant crops more important than ever. Now researchers have developed a new framework that should expedite this important research......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 18th, 2024

Nonnative plants are a major force behind global insect invasions, study finds

In an article in the journal BioScience, an international team of researchers led by Dr. Cleo Bertelsmeier from the University of Lausanne, Switzerland, argues that the global spread of nonnative plants is a key factor driving the growing number of i.....»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxRelated NewsOct 18th, 2024

Single-molecule imaging reveals aberrant DNA-binding dynamics of cancer-linked chromatin remodelers

Biophysical chemists from the National University of Singapore (NUS) have uncovered a previously hidden landscape that governs the intracellular organization and dynamics of SWI/SNF chromatin remodelers, an important class of protein complexes that c.....»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxRelated NewsOct 18th, 2024