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Researchers say they have used a precise genome-editing technique called base editing to alter the genome of human embryos — prompting praise and censure from scientists. Some say the new work is an impressive step towards being able to fix disease-causing mutations in embryos. Others worry the technology could be used to create ‘designer babies’. But it’s premature and risky to attempt this, says developmental cell biologist Dieter Egli, who co-authored the new study, because base editing can damage embryos. In its current form, “you can’t use it. It’s as clear as day and night,” he says.
Reference: bioRxiv preprint (not peer reviewed)
Several diabetes experts were thrown out of the annual meeting of the American Diabetes Association (ADA) as they handed out copies of an editorial critical of the Trump administration’s science policies. Among them were the editor in chief of the organization’s flagship journal, which published the editorial, and other physicians and researchers. “They physically grabbed us, forced us out of the conference center, and now are telling us we can no longer attend this meeting,” said Aaron Kelly, a professor of paediatrics. “It really has come to this in America.” The ADA said in a statement that it is obliged to “maintain a strictly nonpartisan environment”.
Reference: Diabetes Care editorial
A massive slab at the center of Stonehenge somehow travelled 700 kilometres from its origin in northeast Scotland to its current home in the south of England. A model of Neolithic ice flows suggests a glacier might have carried the six-tonne monolith as far as Doggerland — an area that is now beneath the North Sea. Then, roughly 3,000 years before it came to Stonehenge, people may have saved the rock from rising sea levels. “What is exciting about these findings is that they could imply that the people of Doggerland attached cultural significance to the Altar Stone long before it was incorporated into Stonehenge,” says glaciologist and study co-author Remy Veness.
BBC Science Focus | 4 min read
Reference: Journal of Quaternary Science paper
Around the world, multiple types of cancer are climbing rapidly in people under the age of 50, leaving researchers scrambling to find what’s driving them. There’s no smoking gun, but suspects abound: ultra-processed foods, obesity, microbial toxins and agricultural chemicals were all in researchers’ line-up at two influential cancer meetings this year. But rising cancer incidence “does not tell a single story”, says epidemiologist Hyuna Sung. It’s important to investigate the rise of specific cancer types, rather than cases as a whole, to avoid muddying the evidence.
Features & opinion
Antibiotics are an effective, but somewhat indiscriminate solution to some gut infections. Helpful species of gut bacteria get caught in the crossfire, which increases the likelihood that drug-resistant bacterial strains will evolve. Researchers are now designing drugs to selectively target disease-causing species with the help of artificial intelligence. Some teams are using AI to screen drug molecules for the most promising candidates quickly and cheaply. Others have developed tools that predict how drug molecules bind to protein targets to reveal a drug’s mechanism of action, reducing the need for wet-lab experiments.
In Tipping Out of Trouble, complex-systems researcher Marten Scheffer explores the ‘tipping points’ that led to societal transformations throughout history and what we can learn from them to build a sustainable future. “Humanity has tipped out of trouble many times before,” he writes, but doing so now requires a “fundamental shift of scale” in efforts to tackle climate change and nature loss. Scheffer highlights “the complexity of societal change”, writes geographer David Armstrong McKay in his review, and “how it often takes people by surprise but can have positive outcomes”.
As the scientific enterprise in the United States is buffeted by political storms, social scientist Natalie Aviles and ethnographer Janet Vertesi take a fresh look at the influence of sociologist of science Robert K. Merton. Merton described four ‘norms’ — universalism, communalism, disinterestedness and organized scepticism — as the scaffolding of a science unsullied by politics or market forces. Merton’s ideas about a ‘pure’ science were criticized, but they now “take on a fresh urgency as a vision of what science should be”, write the authors. “They offer a direct critique of science under totalitarianism and a prescription for its democratic protection.”
Issues in Science and Technology | 14 min read
On Friday, Leif Penguinson was keeping cool by enjoying the rushing waters of Chilla Gorge, in the Sierra de Gredos mountain range in Spain. Did you find the penguin? When you’re ready, here’s the answer.
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