08-04-a-Sci-Tech Top Wires

Some cells can enter a ‘third state that lies beyond the traditional boundaries of life and death.’ Here’s how.– www.livescience.com
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… The third state challenges how scientists typically understand cell behavior. While caterpillars metamorphosing into butterflies, or tadpoles evolving into frogs, may be familiar developmental transformations, there are few instances where organisms change in ways that are not predetermined. Tumors, organoids and cell lines that can indefinitely divide in a petri dish, like HeLa cells, are not considered part of the third state because they do not develop new functions.

Xenobots are also able to perform kinematic self-replication, meaning they can physically replicate their structure and function without growing. This differs from more common replication processes that involve growth within or on the organism’s body.

Researchers have also found that solitary human lung cells can self-assemble into miniature multicellular organisms that can move around. These anthrobots behave and are structured in new ways. They are not only able to navigate their surroundings but also repair both themselves and injured neuron cells placed nearby.

Taken together, these findings demonstrate the inherent plasticity of cellular systems and challenge the idea that cells and organisms can evolve only in predetermined ways. The third state suggests that organismal death may play a significant role in how life transforms over time.

Diagram A shows an anthrobot building a bridge across a scratched neuron over the course of three days. Diagram B highlights the ‘stitch’ in green at the end of Day 3. (Image credit: Gumuskaya et al. 2023/Advanced ScienceCC BY-SA)

Postmortem conditions

Several factors influence whether certain cells and tissues can survive and function after an organism dies. These include environmental conditions, metabolic activity and preservation techniques.

Different cell types have varying survival times. For example, in humans, white blood cells die between 60 and 86 hours after organismal death. In mice, skeletal muscle cells can be regrown after 14 days postmortem, while fibroblast cells from sheep and goats can be cultured up to a month or so postmortem.

Metabolic activity plays an important role in whether cells can continue to survive and function. Active cells that require a continuous and substantial supply of energy to maintain their function are more difficult to culture than cells with lower energy requirements. Preservation techniques such as cryopreservation can allow tissue samples such as bone marrow to function similarly to that of living donor sources.

Inherent survival mechanisms also play a key role in whether cells and tissues live on. For example, researchers have observed a significant increase in the activity of stress-related genes and immune-related genes after organismal death, likely to compensate for the loss of homeostasis. Moreover, factors such as trauma, infection and the time elapsed since death significantly affect tissue and cell viability.

Different cell types have different capacities for survival, including white blood cells. (Image credit: Ed Reschke via Getty Images)

Factors such as age, health, sex and type of species further shape the postmortem landscape. This is seen in the challenge of culturing and transplanting metabolically active islet cells, which produce insulin in the pancreas, from donors to recipients. Researchers believe that autoimmune processes, high energy costs and the degradation of protective mechanisms could be the reason behind many islet transplant failures.

How the interplay of these variables allows certain cells to continue functioning after an organism dies remains unclear. One hypothesis is that specialized channels and pumps embedded in the outer membranes of cells serve as intricate electrical circuits. These channels and pumps generate electrical signals that allow cells to communicate with each other and execute specific functions such as growth and movement, shaping the structure of the organism they form.

The extent to which different types of cells can undergo transformation after death is also uncertain. Previous research has found that specific genes involved in stress, immunity and epigenetic regulation are activated after death in mice, zebrafish and people, suggesting widespread potential for transformation among diverse cell types.

Implications for biology and medicine

The third state not only offers new insights into the adaptability of cells. It also offers prospects for new treatments.

For example, anthrobots could be sourced from an individual’s living tissue to deliver drugs without triggering an unwanted immune response. Engineered anthrobots injected into the body could potentially dissolve arterial plaque in atherosclerosis patients and remove excess mucus in cystic fibrosis patients.

Importantly, these multicellular organisms have a finite life span, naturally degrading after four to six weeks. This “kill switch” prevents the growth of potentially invasive cells.

A better understanding of how some cells continue to function and metamorphose into multicellular entities some time after an organism’s demise holds promise for advancing personalized and preventive medicine.

This edited article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Excerpt from news.google.com

China’s People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) has tested a new smart bomb-launching electromagnetic rail gun. According to reports, the weapon launched the bomb 9 miles (15km) into the stratosphere at Mach 5+.

However, the test did find some issues around projectile stability that sent the bomb off target. The PLAN will now conduct more research and development to rectify the issue.

According to the South China Morning Post (SCMP)the rail gun’s smart bomb projectile features a pair of gliding wings for guided descent. These wings enable the bomb to, in theory, follow a gentle curve and hit a target around 3 minutes after launch.

However, something went wrong during the test fire, and the bomb went way off its intended target.

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Excerpt from www.cio.com

UK proposes giving digital workers the ‘right to switch off’

Britain’s new Labour government is the latest legislature to consider how it might make it easier for digital workers using always-on technologies to turn them off at the end of the working day.

In Labour’s Plan to Make Work Pay, published before it won the UK’s July general election, it promised to address the issue, saying “We will bring in the ‘right to switch off’ so working from home does not result in homes turning into 24/7 offices.”

And this week it brought the issue back into the spotlight, with a government spokesperson telling the BBC, “Good employers understand that for workers to stay motivated and productive they do need to be able to switch off, and a culture presenteeism can be damaging to productivity,” a government spokesperson told the BBC on Monday.

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Excerpt from news.google.com

… Cellphones generate reams of information about us even when they’re just in our pockets, including revealing our geographical locations—information that is then sold by third-party brokers. In 2017 and 2018, the IRS Criminal Investigation unit (IRS CI) purchased access to a commercial database containing geolocation data from millions of Americans’ cellphones. A spokesman said IRS CI only used the data for “significant money-laundering, cyber, drug and organized-crime cases” and terminated the contract when it failed to yield any useful leads.

During the same time period, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) paid more than $1 million for access to cellphone geolocation databases in an attempt to detect undocumented immigrants entering the country. The Wall Street Journal reported that ICE had used this information to identify and arrest migrants.

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spent $420,000 on location data in order to track “compliance” with “movement restrictions,” such as curfews, as well as to “track patterns of those visiting K-12 schools.”

The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) admitted in a January 2021 memo that it purchases “commercially available geolocation metadata aggregated from smartphones” and that it had searched the database for Americans’ movement histories “five times in the past two-and-a-half years.” The memo further stipulated that “DIA does not construe the Carpenter decision to require a judicial warrant endorsing purchase or use of commercially available data for intelligence purposes.”

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Excerpt from news.google.com

New projects are underway that, if proved successful, could greatly expand the areas considered viable for solar power.

Until recently, it wasn’t considered possible to have a solar array on farmland where crops are grown. Solar arrays on farmland were relegated to grazing land or pollinator habitats, but, according to CleanTechnica, things are quickly changing.

The revolutionary new belief that crops and agrivoltaic arrays can live in harmony is in no small part thanks to the Biden administration and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Energy for America Program. The program provides funding for hundreds of projects, including a $713,000 grant for Talbott Farms, a peach farm in western Colorado, as reported by CleanTechnica.

Those funds will go toward building a one-acre, 420-kilowatt agrivoltaic array on a peach orchard and will power the farm’s entire peach packing and processing operation, according to the Daily Sentinel (via CleanTechnica). That’s significant for a family farm.

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Excerpt from news.google.com

Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense is seeking a new supersonic combustion ramjet technology that could be used for its hypersonic weapons.

A solicitation notice was recently issued to Taiwanese universities for potential scramjet solutions that feature heat-resistant materials.

The tech must also boast improved ignition and flame retention to achieve maximum propulsion efficiency.

The initiative, part of the recently announced National Defense Advanced Technology Research Program, will run over three years starting in 2025.

It will be overseen by the state-owned National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology.

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Excerpt from Raw Story

Former President Donald Trump began posting on the platform formally known as Twitter again on Monday, just hours before he was scheduled to do an interview with X CEO Elon Musk.

However, Trump’s return to the social media website that propelled his 2016 presidential campaign did not do any favors to the share price of the parent company of his own Truth Social media platform.

Shares of Trump Media and Technology Group sunk by more than five percent in trading on Monday and, as of this writing, they are trading in the $24 range.

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Excerpt from www.louderwithcrowder.com

One year ago, Trump posted his mugshot. Before that, he hadn’t posted in two years but now he is back and better than ever, and his posts are already getting more reactions than the Kamala campaign couldn’t even dream of.

Trump’s first video has only been up for several hours and already has nearly 15 million views, 304,000 likes, and 100,000 retweets. Comparatively, Kamala posted a video last night and it only has 5 million views, 25,000 likes, and under 10,000 retweets.

When someone is popular it goes without saying, which is why the media pandering is even more pathetic and obviously a lie.

The difference in messaging is also interesting, as Trump focuses on making America great and fighting for the people, while Kamala focuses on not being Trump with divisive lies that don’t even make sense and no one cares about.

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Excerpt from news.google.com

An incredible sight has overtaken a field near Guazhou County in China’s Gansu Province: almost 30,000 moving mirrors pointed at two huge central towers. This is China’s new dual-tower solar thermal plant, Interesting Engineering reports.

Solar panels that convert sunlight into electricity are becoming a familiar sight all over the world. Solar thermal energy is a little different.

Instead of using solar panels, this new plant uses its thousands of mirrors — each reflecting up to 94% of the light that hits them — to focus a huge amount of sunlight onto the relatively small area of the towers, Interesting Engineering explains. That produces an incredible amount of heat — so much that similar solar-gathering methods can be used for smelting.

Like coal-fired and nuclear power plants, the solar thermal power plant uses the heat to turn water into steam. The rising steam then turns turbines, which generate electricity.