Friday, February 07, 2025

 

Mantis shrimp clubs filter sound to mitigate damage


Patterned armor selectively blocks high-frequency stress waves




Northwestern University

Mantis shrimp 

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A mantis shrimp shows its dactyl clubs (in greenish yellow).

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Credit: Andy Law




Known for their powerful punch, mantis shrimp can smash a shell with the force of a .22 caliber bullet. Yet, amazingly, these tough critters remain intact despite the intense shockwaves created by their own strikes.

Northwestern University researchers have discovered how mantis shrimp remain impervious to their own punches. Their fists, or dactyl clubs, are covered in layered patterns, which selectively filter out sound. By blocking specific vibrations, the patterns act like a shield against self-generated shockwaves.

The study will be published on Friday (Feb. 7) in the journal Science.

The findings someday could be applied to developing synthetic, sound-filtering materials for protective gear as well as inspire new approaches to reducing blast-related injuries in military and sports.

“The mantis shrimp is known for its incredibly powerful strike, which can break mollusk shells and even crack aquarium glass,” said Northwestern’s Horacio D. Espinosa, the study’s co-corresponding author. “However, to repeatedly execute these high-impact strikes, the mantis shrimp’s dactyl club must have a robust protection mechanism to prevent self-damage. Most prior work has focused on the club’s toughness and crack resistance, treating the structure as a toughened impact shield. We found it uses phononic mechanisms — structures that selectively filter stress waves. This enables the shrimp to preserve its striking ability over multiple impacts and prevent soft tissue damage.”

An expert on bio-inspired materials, Espinosa is the James N. and Nancy J. Farley Professor in Manufacturing and Entrepreneurship and a professor of mechanical engineering at Northwestern’s McCormick School of Engineering, where he directs the Institute for Cellular Engineering Technologies. Espinosa led the study in partnership with M. Abi Ghanem of the Institute of Light and Matter, a joint research unit between Claude-Bernard-Lyon-I University and the Center for National Scientific Research in France.

A devastating blow

Living in shallow, tropical waters, mantis shrimp are armed with one hammer-like dactyl club on each side of its body. These clubs store energy in elastic, spring-like structures, which are held in place by latch-like tendons. When the latch is released, the stored energy, too, is released — propelling the club forward with explosive force.

With a single blow, mantis shrimp can slaughter prey or defend their territory from interloping competitors. As the punch rips through surrounding water, it creates a low-pressure zone behind it, causing a bubble to form.

“When the mantis shrimp strikes, the impact generates pressure waves onto its target,” Espinosa said. “It also creates bubbles, which rapidly collapse to produce shockwaves in the megahertz range. The collapse of these bubbles releases intense bursts of energy, which travel through the shrimp’s club. This secondary shockwave effect, along with the initial impact force, makes the mantis shrimp’s strike even more devastating.”

Protective patterns

Surprisingly, this force does not damage the shrimp’s delicate nerves and tissues, which are encased within its armor. 

To investigate this phenomenon, Espinosa and colleagues used two advanced techniques to examine the mantis shrimp’s armor in fine detail. First, they applied transient grating spectroscopy, a laser-based method that analyzes how stress waves propagate through materials. Second, they employed picosecond laser ultrasonics, which provide further insights into the armor’s microstructure.

Their experiments revealed two distinct regions — each engineered for a specific function — within the mantis shrimp’s club. The impact region, responsible for delivering crushing blows, consists of mineralized fibers arranged in a herringbone pattern, giving it resistance to failure. Beneath this layer, the periodic region features twisted, corkscrew-like fiber bundles. These bundles form a Bouligand structure, a layered arrangement, in which each layer is progressively rotated relative to its neighbors.

While the herringbone pattern reinforces the club against fractures, the corkscrew arrangement governs how stress waves travel through the structure. This intricate design acts as a phononic shield, selectively filtering high-frequency stress waves to prevent damaging vibrations from propagating back into the shrimp’s arm and body.

“The periodic region plays a crucial role in selectively filtering out high-frequency shear waves, which are particularly damaging to biological tissues” Espinosa said. “This effectively shields the shrimp from damaging stress waves caused by the direct impact and bubble collapse.”

In this study, the researchers analyzed 2D simulations of wave behavior. Espinosa said 3D simulations are needed to fully understand the club’s complex structure.

“Future research should focus on more complex 3D simulations to fully capture how the club’s structure interacts with shockwaves,” Espinosa said. “Additionally, designing aquatic experiments with state-of-the-art instrumentation would allow us to investigate how phononic properties function in submerged conditions.”

The study, “Does the mantis shrimp pack a phononic shield?” was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the Office of Naval Research and the National Science Foundation.

 

Large differences in water-seeking ability found in U.S. corn varieties




Stanford University

Researchers 

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Researchers Johannes Scharwies and José Dinneny standing in front of corn plants grown to study root responses to moisture at the Stanford Greenhouse Facility.

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Credit: LiPo Ching, Stanford University





A corn plant knows how to find water in soil with the very tips of its roots, but some varieties, including many used for breeding high-yielding corn in the U.S., appear to have lost a portion of that ability, according to a Stanford-led study. With climate change increasing droughts, the findings hold potential for developing more resilient varieties of corn.

The study, published in the journal Science, uncovers genetic mechanisms behind root “hydropatterning,” or how plant roots branch toward water and avoid dry spaces in soil. In particular, the researchers discovered that ethylene, a plant hormone known to help bananas ripen, also influences how roots grow to seek water.

“Plants are sophisticated in the way that they ‘see’ where water is in soil, and the genes that are responsible for that play an important role in helping the plant create a root system that is optimized for efficient water uptake,” said José Dinneny, the study’s senior author and a professor of biology in Stanford’s School of Humanities and Sciences.

Essentially, the plants use the gaseous ethylene produced by their roots to sense where the air spaces are in the soil, Dinneny said. Then, they regulate the branching of roots downstream of that hormone.

Water-seeking roots

While the Dinneny lab had previously revealed the fine sensitivity that corn roots have for detecting water, just how well a plant does this was found to heavily depend on the specific variety of corn.

For this study, the researchers developed a new, simplified way to study water sensitivity in roots, making it possible to analyze the responses of 250 corn varieties that reflect the genetic pool present in modern corn breeding. They found that corn varieties adapted to grow in tropical or subtropical areas like Mexico were very good at making new root branches toward water and avoiding dry areas. In contrast, the varieties adapted to temperate regions of North America frequently grew roots in many directions without distinguishing between dry and wet areas in the soil. This work was made possible through an international collaboration of several research groups contributing expertise in quantitative genetics, evolution, and root development.

The development of modern corn grown in the U.S., a major crop often grown on highly fertile agricultural lands, may have weakened the plants’ water-seeking root response, the researchers said. They also noted that comparisons to field studies showed that stronger hydropatterning was linked to greater root depth.

“Interestingly, the plants that are better at sensing where the water is are also making deeper root systems,” said lead author Johannes Scharwies, a postdoctoral scholar in Dinneny’s lab. “One hypothesis could be that if the plant doesn’t waste time growing root branches into places where it doesn’t find any water and nutrients, then it has more energy to grow deeper down where water is more likely.”

Targeting drought resilience

The researchers found through genetic analyses that two plant hormones, auxin and ethylene, play a role in how corn roots respond to water. While auxin was already known to help control this process, ethylene’s involvement was a new discovery. In experiments with thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana) – a model plant often used in research – the researchers found that the genetic signaling pathways of the two hormones complement each other: Auxin signaling promotes root branch development toward water, while ethylene suppresses branching when the root is exposed to air.

Further research is needed to better understand the interaction of these genetic pathways before corn varieties can be developed with more drought-resilient root systems, but the findings underscore the importance of studying these localized responses at root tips, Scharwies said.

“Each root tip acts like a sensor in the soil. They forage for water and nutrients and control in which direction new root branches should be grown,” he said. “We need to spend more time looking at these very local root responses to understand what the whole plant does, and then we can use that to develop plants that are more resilient against drought.”

 

Corn roots growing in a custom-designed assay to measure root branching responses to moisture, a phenomenon known as hydropatterning.

Credit

LiPo Ching, Stanford University



Additional co-authors on the study include life sciences technician Taylor Clarke, lab manager Andrea Dinneny, and postdoctoral scholar Héctor Torres-Martínez from Stanford as well as researchers from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Iowa State University, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, University of Oslo in Norway, University of Nottingham in the U.K., and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.


 SPAGYRIC HERBALISM

Warding off superbugs with a pinch of turmeric


In a new study, researchers at Texas A&M have evaluated a low-cost yet effective technology called photodynamic inactivation using curcumin to curb bacterial resistance



Texas A&M University





In 2017, a tragic incident unfolded in a Nevada hospital. A woman, admitted for pneumonia, tragically succumbed to multiple organ failure and sepsis. The culprit? A strain of bacteria that had developed resistance to a staggering 26 different antibiotics. These superbugs, or antibiotic-resistant bacteria, stand as one of the most pressing public health threats globally. 

Joining the effort to fight these deadly pathogens, researchers at Texas A&M have now shown that curcumin, the compound that gives turmeric its characteristic bright yellow color, can potentially be used to reduce antibiotic resistance. 

The researchers showed that when curcumin is intentionally given to bacteria as food and then activated by light, it can trigger deleterious reactions within these microbes, eventually killing them. This process, they demonstrated, reduces the number of antibiotic-resistant strains and renders conventional antibiotics effective again.

The results of the study are published in the journal Scientific Reports.

Before antibiotics, infectious diseases were the leading cause of death and disability around the world. With the advent of these life-saving medications, the human lifespan has increased by 23 years on average. In the last several decades, while the discovery of novel antibiotics has plateaued, antibiotic resistant bacteria have simultaneously become more common, ushering in the era of superbugs, such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant enterococcus, and pneumonia, which are all extremely hard to treat. In fact, infectious diseases are projected to be the main causes of human mortality once again, claiming up to 10 million lives annually. 

“When bacteria start becoming resistant to conventional antibiotics, we have what we call an antibiotic catastrophe,” said Dr. Vanderlei Bagnato, professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering and senior author on the study. “To overcome this challenge, we need alternative ways to either kill the superbugs or find a novel way to modify natural processes within the bacteria so that antibiotics start to act again.” 

Bacteria display natural variation within a given population. This heterogeneity introduces variations in cell behaviors, including response to antibiotics, which can directly contribute to treatment resistance if some strains survive antimicrobial medication and continue replicating. Thus, the researchers wanted to curb bacterial heterogeneity to control bacterial resistance.

Photodynamic inactivation, a technique that has shown promise in combating bacterial resistance, uses light and light-sensitive molecules, called photosensitizers, to produce reactive oxygen species that can kill microorganisms by disrupting their metabolic processes. In their experiments, the team used curcumin, which is also a natural food for bacteria. They tested this technique on strains of Staphylococcus aureus that are resistant to amoxicillin, erythromycin, and gentamicin. 

The researchers exposed the bacteria to many cycles of light exposure and then compared the minimum concentration of antibiotics needed to kill the bacteria after light exposure versus those that did not get light exposure. 

“When we have a mixed population of bacteria where some are resistant, we can use photodynamic inactivation to narrow the bacterial distribution, leaving behind strains that are more or less similar in their response to antibiotics,” said Bagnato. “It’s much easier now to predict the precise antibiotic dose needed to remove the infection.”

The team noted that photodynamic inactivation using curcumin has tremendous potential as an adjuvant or additional therapy with antibiotics for diseases, like pneumonia, caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

“Photodynamic inactivation offers a cost-effective treatment option, which is crucial for reducing medical expenses not only in developing countries but also in the United States,” said Dr. Vladislav Yakovlev, professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering and author on the study. “It also has potential applications in military medicine, where this technology could be used to treat battlefield wounds and prevent the development and spread of antimicrobial resistance, a significant concern in combat situations."

Contributors to the research include Dr. Jennifer Soares, who is the primary author on the paper, and Dr. Kate Blanco from Institute of Physics of São Carlos, University of São Paulo, Brazil. 

This research was financially supported by São Paulo Research Foundation, National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas, Governor’s University Research Initiative, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, and the National Institutes of Health.

By Texas A&M University

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Physicians committee research policy director speaks at hearing on taxpayer funded animal cruelty



Nonprofit asked lawmakers to end federal support for animal research and reinvest savings into human-based models



Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine





WASHINGTON, D.C. — Research Policy Director Elizabeth Baker from the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a national medical ethics and health advocacy group of 17,000 physicians, spoke today, Feb. 6, at a Congressional hearing focused on ending federally funded animal cruelty in research.  

The U.S. House Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Information Technology, and Government Innovation Chairwoman Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) announced the hearing in a news release on Monday, with plans to evaluate current animal cruelty funded by the federal government and explore opportunities to prioritize technological alternatives that increase relevance to humans.

“To truly Make America Healthy Again, we need to make science human again.” Baker said.

“For generations, billions of federal dollars have paid scientists to conduct acts on dogs, cats, monkeys, rabbits and other animals that would shock the conscience of most Americans,” she continued.

Highlighting one particularly cruel NIH-funded study, Baker testified that “dogs have been subjected to multiple major surgeries, have devices stabbed into their hearts, and been forced to run on treadmills until they die. Despite 34 years of this work and hundreds of dead dogs, there has been no benefit to patients.”

Increasingly, it is recognized across research fields that animals are not good surrogates for humans especially when much better human-based models exist. The vast majority of Americans agree. Over 80% of more than 2,000 respondents polled in September 2024 in a Physicians Committee/Morning Consult survey agreed that animal-based research should be phased out in support of methods that do not use animals.

At the hearing, Baker asked U.S. lawmakers to end federal support for wasteful and ineffective animal research and reinvest part of the savings into human-based research approaches.

“Ending federally funded animal experiments is long overdue,” she said.  “Both Congress and the Administration must take action to ensure that government funding and requests for animal experiments are stopped, and that instead, funding is reinvested into more effective human-based approaches.”

Baker presented the Subcommittee policy changes that can easily be made to curb cruel animal research and testing, including denying funding for National Primate Research Centers that house, breed, and experiment on monkeys, ending foreign research funded by NIH which operates without oversight, and prohibiting research – especially in human nutrition – where objectives can easily be met without using animals. Further, Baker called for the support of efforts already underway at NIH and other federal agencies to accelerate human-based research and testing.   

Founded in 1985, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine is a nonprofit organization that promotes preventive medicine, conducts clinical research, and encourages higher standards for ethics and effectiveness in education and research.

 

New technology lights way for accelerating coral reef restoration


Improved prey feeding sparks rise in coral resilience, study finds



Ohio State University





COLUMBUS, Ohio – Scientists have developed a novel tool designed to protect and conserve coral reefs by providing them with an abundance of feeding opportunities. 

The device, dubbed the Underwater Zooplankton Enhancement Light Array (UZELA), is an autonomous, programmable underwater light that works to draw in nearby zooplankton, microscopic organisms that coral feed on. 

After testing the submersible on two species of coral native to Hawaii over six months, researchers found that UZELA could greatly enhance local zooplankton density and increase the feeding rates of both healthy and bleached coral. Importantly, providing coral with greater amounts of food makes them stronger and more likely to be resilient against certain environmental threats, like heat stress or ocean acidification. 

This result is impressive, especially at a time when rising ocean temperatures are forcing entire coral reefs to the cusp of collapse, said Andrea Grottoli, lead author of the study and a professor of earth sciences at The Ohio State University.

“Coral reefs house one-third of all marine species, yet occupy less than 1% of the ocean,” she said. “They are disproportionately responsible for ocean health and we’re at risk of losing them.”

The study was recently published in the journal Limnology and Oceanography: Methods

Millions of humans rely on coral reefs, as they support fishing industries and protect coastline communities from dangers like erosion and floods. Unfortunately, many climate models project that at Earth’s current rate of warming, these vital coral reefs may be completely devastated by 2050, jeopardizing the complex ecosystems they sustain. 

Although the technology in this study is only a short-term solution to the environmental threats that coral reefs face, the device will likely be very beneficial to coral restoration efforts, said Grottoli. “Think of it as a band-aid for about a couple decades,” she said. “It can protect some corals in some places, sometimes.” 

The team also found that UZELA, which can be powered for half a year on a single battery, could optimize a coral’s feeding time by operating for just one hour after dusk. 

Understandably, artificial lights can disrupt the behavior of other marine animals, so researchers could choose not to use the device year-round. That said, the study emphasizes that corralling zooplankton with this human-made tool doesn’t seem to harm the environment or interrupt the flow of other zooplankton in the surrounding area. 

“If you imagine zooplankton in a column floating above coral, instead of being naturally dispersed, UZELA is just pulling them down, but it’s not taking away from the coral beside it,” said Grottoli. “We show that if you put the coral close to the light, they benefit from that concentrated zooplankton, and feeding rates go up 10- to 50-fold.”

This number is equivalent to an 18-68% increase in the amount of metabolic demand that can be met by zooplankton alone, meaning that increased feeding helps supplement a large part of the coral’s diet, which successfully leads to an increase in coral survivorship and persistence. 

“The real intent of this project is to inject new technology and energy into coral restoration success,” Grottoli said. “It’s something that can be deployed strategically for high-value reefs, or projects that have already had a lot of investment in them.”

Widely adaptable to various marine environments, UZELA can also easily be serviced by divers once placed in optimal underwater locations.

Notably, while the current generation of UZELAs are handmade, the team is working with an Ohio-based engineering company to redesign the technology to make it more manufacturable. Grottoli expects these more enhanced versions will be available within the next one to three years. 

“We are not mitigating climate change fast enough to save coral, and UZELA is not going to instantly save coral reefs,” she said. “But it is an exciting solution that will buy us time as we work toward a more sustainable environment.”

Other co-authors include Shannon Dixon and Ann Marie Hulver from Ohio State as well as Claire Bardin, Claire Lewis, Christopher Suchocki and Rob Toonen from the University of Hawai’i at Manoa and the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology. 

The study was supported by the University of Hawai’i Foundation, the National Science Foundation and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. 

Written by: Tatyana Woodall, Woodall.52@osu.ed