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AI-designed antivenoms could help treat lethal snakebites
Researchers have shown that machine learning can quickly design antivenoms that are effective against lethal snake-toxins, which they hope will help tackle a serious public health issue. Thousands of people die as a result of snakebites each year, but treatment options are limited, expensive and often difficult to access in the resource-poor settings where most bites occur. The computer-aided approach allowed researchers to design two proteins that provided near total protection against individual snake toxins in mouse experiments. While limited in scope, the team behind the work believe these results demonstrate the promise of the approach in designing effective and cheaper treatments for use in humans.
Research Article: Vázquez Torres et al.
How male wasp spiders use hairs on their legs to sniff out mates, and how noradrenaline drives waves of cleansing fluid through the brain.
Research Highlight: Male spiders smell with their legs
Research Highlight: How the brain cleans itself during deep sleep
News broke last week that in 2024, Earth’s average temperature climbed to more than 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels for the first time. Although this is only a single year so far, we discuss what breaking this significant threshold means for the 2015 Paris climate agreement and what climate scientists understand about the speed that Earth is heating up.
Nature: Earth breaches 1.5 °C climate limit for the first time: what does it mean?
NASA delays deciding its strategy for collecting and returning Mars rocks to Earth, and why papers on a handful of bacterial species dominate the scientific literature.
Nature: NASA still has no plan for how to bring precious Mars rocks to Earth
Nature: These are the 20 most-studied bacteria — the majority have been ignored
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These mysterious ridges could help skin regenerate
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Briefing Chat: What Brazilian centenarians could reveal about the science of ageing
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How your brain chemistry rewards hard work
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Audio long read: ‘I rarely get outside’ — scientists ditch fieldwork in the age of AI
18:29|This is an audio version of our Feature: ‘I rarely get outside’: scientists ditch fieldwork in the age of AI
Briefing Chat: The canny cow that can use tools, and how babies share their microbiomes
12:03|In this episode:00:24 How babies share their gut microbesNature: Sending babies to nursery completely reshapes their microbiome05:25 First evidence of tool use in cattleScience: No bull: This Austrian cow has learned to use toolsSubscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.
The biggest 'Schrödinger's cat' yet — physicists put 7,000 atoms in superposition
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Briefing Chat: Can NASA return rocks from Mars? And why dogs have long ears
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AI can turbocharge scientists' careers — but limit their scope
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