Tuesday, June 24, 2025

 

Using light-powered enzymes to build clean, high-value chemicals



Through photocatalysis, researchers created a precise, cost-effective way to make chiral ketones for medicines, agrochemicals, and more.




University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Institute for Sustainability, Energy, and Environment

CABBI Postdoc Zhengyi Zhang 

image: 

CABBI Postdoc Zhengyi Zhang works at the Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology (IGB) at Illinois. Using photocatalysis, Zhang and his co-authors developed a more cost-effective, eco-friendly way to build chiral ketones, valuable chemicals used in agrochemicals, medicines, and other products.

view more 

Credit: Center for Advanced Bioenergy and Bioproducts Innovation (CABBI)





A pioneering research lab at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has achieved another milestone using light-driven enzymatic reactions to convert simple biological building blocks into valuable chemicals.

The researchers, part of the Center for Advanced Bioenergy and Bioproducts Innovation (CABBI), developed a clean, efficient way to make complex chemicals called chiral ketones through photocatalysis — combining bioengineered enzymes with light to create novel reactions.

“Enzymes are powerful catalysts, but they are limited by the narrow scope of their reactivity for industrial applications. In this work, we have successfully demonstrated that enzymes with new-to-nature reactivity can be created by light,” said CABBI Conversion Theme Leader Huimin Zhao, corresponding author for the study. Zhao, whose lab has used that approach to produce other valuable chemical reactions, is Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering (ChBE), Biosystems Design Theme Leader at the Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology (IGB), and Director of the NSF Molecule Maker Lab Institute, NSF iBioFoundry, and NSF Global Center for Biofoundry Applications at Illinois.

The new study, published in Nature Catalysis, was led by first authors Zhengyi Zhang and Maolin Li, Postdoctoral Research Associates with CABBI, ChBE, and IGB. CABBI is a Bioenergy Research Center funded by the Department of Energy (DOE).

Many useful chemicals — especially in agrochemicals and medicines — exist in two mirror-image forms, like left and right hands. These are called chiral molecules, and often only one “hand” is effective or safe. While chemists can build chiral molecules from scratch using a strategy called asymmetric catalysis, this process can be complex and costly.

In contrast, making a racemic mixture — a 50:50 blend of both mirror-image forms — is often easier and cheaper. That’s why another approach, called enantioconvergent catalysis, is so valuable: It allows both versions in a racemic mixture to be converted into the product of one chirality. However, most current methods can only do this when the stereocenter is near the reactive site of the molecule. Reaching remote stereocenters — parts that are farther away and harder to access — is still a major challenge.

In this study, scientists solved the problem by using a photoenzymatic reaction. When exposed to light, the enzyme generates a nitrogen-centered radical — a very reactive intermediate that can break the remote chiral carbon-hydrogen bond through a process called 1,5-hydrogen atom transfer.

The enzyme then carefully rebuilds this bond of the molecule by hydrogen atom transfer, choosing one preferred “handedness.” This method allows both forms of the starting material to be funneled into the same chiral product, even when the original chiral center is far from the reaction center – offering a precise and eco-friendly way to make chiral molecules with complicated structures.

“Everyone was puzzled at first — we were studying a different reaction involving nitrogen-centered radicals when this unexpected result appeared,” Zhang said. “I’m glad we didn’t miss this interesting discovery.”

Importantly, the ketones used in this research can be readily derived from C6 and C12 fatty acids found in plant biomass. This creates a new opportunity to transform renewable carbon sources like bioenergy crops into high-value molecules, supporting CABBI’s mission to build sustainable biomanufacturing platforms based on plant-derived feedstocks.

This approach aligns with the DOE’s broader goals of developing innovative technologies for a sustainable bioeconomy. It offers a cleaner, more efficient way to make the specific “handed” forms of molecules needed for medicines, agrochemicals, and other everyday products. By using light and enzymes to convert cheap, easy-to-make mixtures into high-value compounds, the method can reduce costs and chemical waste — making it both practical and environmentally friendly.

Co-authors on the study included CABBI’s Wesley Harrison, Jingxia Lu, and Yujie Yuan, all of ChBE and IGB; and Zhenxiang Zhao of the Department of Chemistry at Illinois.

 

The Vaccine Innovation Center of Korea University's College of Medicine successfully held a special seminar with Professor Pierre Van Damme





Korea University College of Medicine
Prof. Pierre Van Damme 

image: 

Prof. Pierre Van Damme is giving presentation

view more 

Credit: Korea University Medicine





On April 29th, the Vaccine Innovation Center (Director Chung Hee-Jin) of Korea University's College of Medicine successfully held a special seminar with Professor Pierre Van Damme, a world-renowned vaccine expert, at the Yoon Joo-Hong lecture room, 4th floor main building.

 

61 researchers joined this seminar to have in-depth discussions on the latest research trends and strategies in vaccine development and clinical trials.

 

 

Professor Pierre Van Damme is a world-renowned vaccine expert who has been selected as one of the 2025 recipient of the Park Man-Hoon Award for his contribution to lead the development of the first oral polio type 2 vaccine (nOPV2), which received emergency use authorization from WHO. The professor shared his experience of leading more than 500 clinical trials, as well as his experience of establishing and managing Vaccinopolis, a global research hub for vaccine clinical trials. He expressed his hope for active cooperation with Korean researchers, including Korea University's College of Medicine.

 

 

Director Chung Hee-Jin of the Vaccine Innovation Center said, "Tt was meaningful that through this seminar, such renowned scholar shared his precious experiences to us all. We will further enhance global cooperation at the forefront of vaccine R&D, and continue to provide practical opportunities to domestic researchers."

 

 

The Vaccine Innovation Center of Korea University's College of Medicine will continue to expand its cooperation with global experts via special seminars to invite overseas experts, becoming a leading global research hub for innovative strategies in vaccine development.


full shot of seminar room

Credit

Korea University Medicine


 

Moderate caloric restriction may slow ovarian aging in primates



“Overall, CR may improve aspects of reproductive longevity in the NHP, but the timing of when it occurs during the reproductive lifespan is likely critical.”




Impact Journals LLC

Short-term moderate caloric restriction in the rhesus macaque attenuates markers of ovarian aging in select populations 

image: 

Figure 7. Assessment of collagen I and III in histologic ovarian sections using Picrosirius red (PSR). Representative images of PSR stained ovarian tissue sections for (A) young control, (B) old control, (C) young calorie-restricted (CR), and (D) old calorie-restricted (CR). Corresponding representative images of the quantitative histology algorithm showing intensity of PSR staining, where low intensity pixels are shown in yellow, medium intensity pixels are shown in blue, and high intensity are shown in green for (E) young control, (F) old control, (G) young calorie-restricted (CR), and (H) old calorie-restricted (CR). Bar graphs showing quantification of (I) low intensity, (J) medium intensity, and (K) high intensity pixels. An N = 3 images per animal and N = 4–8 animals per experimental group were analyzed. Data are presented as mean ± SEM. Statistics were calculated using a two-way ANOVA with Sidak’s multiple comparison test. *p ≤ 0.05. **p 0.01. The scale bar is 1 mm.

view more 

Credit: Copyright: © 2025 Gargus et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.





“Overall, CR may improve aspects of reproductive longevity in the NHP, but the timing of when it occurs during the reproductive lifespan is likely critical.”

BUFFALO, NY — June 24, 2025 — A new research paper was published in Aging (Aging-US) Volume 17, Issue 5, on May 20, 2025, titled “Short-term moderate caloric restriction in the rhesus macaque attenuates markers of ovarian aging in select populations.”

In this study, led by first author Emma S. Gargus and corresponding author Francesca E. Duncan from Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University, researchers explored how dietary changes impact ovarian aging in female rhesus macaques. They found that a three-year moderate reduction in caloric intake preserved a youthful distribution of ovarian follicles and reduced age-related tissue stiffness. These findings are relevant to women’s health as they suggest that caloric restriction (CR) may help delay the decline in reproductive function associated with aging.

Ovarian aging, which leads to reduced fertility and hormone production, is one of the earliest signs of aging in women. This study investigated whether a 30% reduction in caloric intake could protect the ovaries from age-related damage in nonhuman primates (NHP), whose reproductive biology closely mirrors that of humans. Ovaries were collected from young (10–13 years) and old (19–26 years) rhesus macaques who were either on a diet of moderate caloric restriction or a control diet for three years.

“To test the effect of CR on follicle number, follicles were analyzed in histological sections from animals across experimental cohorts: Young Control, Young CR, Old Control, Old CR (n = 4–8/group).”

Although total follicle numbers still declined with age, caloric restriction helped maintain the types of follicles most associated with reproductive potential. In older monkeys who were still cycling, even if irregularly, caloric restriction preserved more primordial follicles, the key indicators of ovarian reserve, than in those on a normal diet.

The benefits of caloric restriction were also seen in the structure of ovarian tissue. Normally, aging leads to fibrosis, a stiffening of the ovarian environment caused by increased collagen and decreased hyaluronic acid. This study showed that caloric restriction reduced this fibrotic process, suggesting a more supportive environment for maintaining reproductive health.

While the diet did not stop the overall loss of follicles with age, it improved the proportion of younger, more viable follicles in aging ovaries. The timing of the dietary intervention also appeared to matter. Positive effects were more noticeable in older animals with irregular cycles than in those who had completely stopped cycling. This indicates that starting caloric restriction at a certain point in the reproductive lifespan may yield the best results.

This research is an important step to identifying lifestyle-based strategies that can extend reproductive longevity. Although further studies are needed to test these findings in humans, the work supports the potential of moderate dietary changes to delay ovarian aging and help preserve fertility later in life.

Read the full paper: DOIhttps://doi.org/10.18632/aging.206253

Corresponding author: Francesca E. Duncan – f-duncan@northwestern.edu

Keywords: aging, ovarian reserve, fibrosis, nonhuman primate, caloric restriction

Click here to sign up for free Altmetric alerts about this article.

______

To learn more about the journal, please visit our website at www.Aging-US.com​​ and connect with us on social media at:

Click here to subscribe to Aging publication updates.

For media inquiries, please contact media@impactjournals.com.

 

National data shows post-pandemic rise in head and shoulder injuries for youth hockey players



Mount Sinai study aimed at improving protections for pediatric athletes




The Mount Sinai Hospital / Mount Sinai School of Medicine





Journal: Injury

Title: Pediatric Ice Hockey Injury Trends Presenting to U.S. Emergency Departments: A 10-Year Review of National Injury Data

Authors: Luca M. Valdivia, MS, MD Candidate at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Sheena Ranade, MD, Associate Professor of Orthopedics, and Pediatrics, at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Bottom line: This study analyzes pediatric ice hockey injuries in emergency departments throughout the United States, finding a post-pandemic rise in head and shoulder injuries as well as hospitalizations.

Why this study is unique: This is the first study of its kind to assess these trends using recent National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) data through 2023.

Why the study is important: This research highlights emerging injury patterns in youth ice hockey, specifically a rise in serious head and shoulder injuries after the pandemic. Understanding these trends can inform safer equipment standards, improve injury prevention strategies, and guide policy changes to better protect young athletes.

How the research was conducted: This research was conducted using data from NEISS, a publicly available, nationally representative database operated by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission which collects injury data from a sample of approximately 100 hospitals with 24-hour emergency departments, allowing for the estimation of injury patterns across the United States. Data were collected for all ice hockey-related injuries in the pediatric (under 18 years) population between January 1, 2014, and December 31, 2023.

Results: These findings show that while overall injury rates in pediatric ice hockey have remained steady, several interesting post-pandemic trends emerged. Firstly, the data shows an increase in injuries among female youth hockey players since 2020, potentially attributed to the rise in popularity and accessibility of women’s ice hockey in recent years. Additionally, the data shows a rise in head and shoulder trauma for youth hockey players since 2020, as well as a rise in fractures, particularly to the upper extremities. The hospitalization rate from these injuries has also increased post-pandemic which may reflect a rise in more serious injuries, such as fractures or head trauma, or it could be due to changes in injury management practices with more severe injuries requiring hospital stays for better care. Hospitalization trends may also be influenced by the increase in high-energy injuries, as seen in the rising frequency of shoulder and head trauma. Increased violence in teenage hockey, possibly due to a shift toward more aggressive play, might also be contributing to these higher rates of hospitalization.

What this study means for doctors: This research emphasizes the importance of thorough concussion assessments, injury documentation, and awareness of rising injury severity post-pandemic. The findings suggest clinicians should continue to play a key role in educating families about proper equipment use and return-to-play protocols. Additionally, as youth hockey becomes more competitive and aggressive, further investigation into the long-term effects of these severe injuries on young athletes is essential.

What this study means for patients: This study could impact youth hockey by influencing safety guidelines, encouraging better protective equipment standards, and informing rule changes to reduce high-risk play. It may also guide future research and help health care providers, coaches, and parents make more informed decisions to protect young athletes from serious injury.

What the next steps are for this work: Next steps include conducting additional studies which track injuries with more detailed exposure data such as hours played, position, and level of play. Researchers may then evaluate the effectiveness of specific safety interventions and examine the long-term consequences of these injuries in youth athletes.

Quotes:

“Our hope with this paper is to draw attention to the types of injuries that occur in hockey and highlight the importance of well-fitting gear to prevent such injuries,” says Dr. Ranade.

“Our study highlights critical trends in pediatric ice hockey injuries across a decade of national emergency department data, with a concerning rise in head and shoulder trauma after 2020. As youth participation in hockey grows, so too does the responsibility to protect these athletes through improved safety equipment and education. These findings underscore the urgent need for targeted injury prevention strategies to keep the sport both competitive and safe for developing players,” says Mr. Valdivia.

About the Mount Sinai Health System

Mount Sinai Health System is one of the largest academic medical systems in the New York metro area, with 48,000 employees working across seven hospitals, more than 400 outpatient practices, more than 600 research and clinical labs, a school of nursing, and a leading school of medicine and graduate education. Mount Sinai advances health for all people, everywhere, by taking on the most complex health care challenges of our time—discovering and applying new scientific learning and knowledge; developing safer, more effective treatments; educating the next generation of medical leaders and innovators; and supporting local communities by delivering high-quality care to all who need it.

Through the integration of its hospitals, labs, and schools, Mount Sinai offers comprehensive health care solutions from birth through geriatrics, leveraging innovative approaches such as artificial intelligence and informatics while keeping patients’ medical and emotional needs at the center of all treatment. The Health System includes approximately 9,000 primary and specialty care physicians and 11 free-standing joint-venture centers throughout the five boroughs of New York City, Westchester, Long Island, and Florida. Hospitals within the System are consistently ranked by Newsweek’s® “The World’s Best Smart Hospitals, Best in State Hospitals, World Best Hospitals and Best Specialty Hospitals” and by U.S. News & World Report's® “Best Hospitals” and “Best Children’s Hospitals.” The Mount Sinai Hospital is on the U.S. News & World Report® “Best Hospitals” Honor Roll for 2024-2025.

For more information, visit https://www.mountsinai.org or find Mount Sinai on FacebookInstagramLinkedInX, and YouTube.

###

 

Geospatial information technology innovations: From Earth monitoring to urban planning



Higher Education Press





Nowadays, spatiotemporal information, positioning, and navigation services have become critical components of new infrastructure. Precise positioning technology is indispensable for determining spatiotemporal information and providing navigation services. It plays an irreplaceable role not only in scientific research, such as global climate change and earthquake monitoring, but also in the execution of major initiatives like satellite navigation, manned spaceflight, deep space exploration, and in economic development. Moreover, geoinformation science is a discipline that studies the theories and methods for acquiring, managing, querying, analyzing, sharing, utilizing, and visualizing spatiotemporal information. It serves as a key technology for information construction, such as digital earth and smart cities, thus becoming a fast-growing, cutting-edge interdisciplinary field. Both these fields have broad application prospects.

 

As human activities extend from the Earth’s surface to deep space, deep earth, and deep sea at an unprecedented speed and scale, higher demands for the accuracy of the Terrestrial Reference Frame (TRF) and satellite positioning have been raised. For example, establishing a unified reference frame for the Earth and its adjacent space requires precise satellite orbit determination with an accuracy of one centimeter (cm), while monitoring the Earth system, for example, earthquakes and long-term sea-level changes, demands millimeter-level positioning accuracy, with the accuracy of TRF reaching one millimeter (mm). Nevertheless, the latest version of the most widely used international TRF (ITRF) with the highest-precision, ITRF2020, only exhibits an accuracy of 1 cm, which cannot meet these demands. The complex nonlinear motion of globally distributed reference stations used for establishing TRF remains a major factor limiting its accuracy. Among these factors, environmental loads caused by the redistribution of atmospheric, hydrological, and oceanic mass are the primary geophysical origins. Zhao Li and Weiping Jiang from Wuhan University, along with Tonie van Dam from the University of Utah, summarize the recent advances in applying environmental loading to address nonlinear motion in global and regional satellite navigation reference stations, provide an in-depth analysis of the scientific questions of existing studies and insights into future research directions, indicating that further refining the environmental load modeling method, establishing a surface mass distribution model with high spatiotemporal resolution and reliability, exploring other environmental load factors such as ice sheet and artificial mass-change effects, and developing an optimal data-processing model and strategy for reprocessing global reference station data consistently could contribute to achieving the century goal of establishing an “one millimeter-level TRF” in the international geodesy community.

 

Since 2023, the world has experienced numerous earthquakes. The frequent seismic activities draw the special attention of humankind. Precise coseismic displacements are crucial for earthquake early warning in order to enable decision-makers to issue alerts for public safety. Real-time Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSSs) have proven to be a valuable tool for seismic monitoring. Jianghui Geng et al. from Wuhan University have developed the GSeisRT software to support multi-GNSS precise point positioning with ambiguity resolution, achieving real-time positioning with centimeter- to sub-centimeter-level precision. Within a few minutes, the precision of horizontal displacement could reach 4 mm. Since 2019, GSeisRT has been deployed in China, the United States, Chile, New Zealand, and Indonesia, capturing the M7.4 (M stands for magnitude) event in Mexico, the M5.8 event in California (USA), and the M7.3 event in China, which opens up a new approach to wide-area real-time seismic monitoring in real time.

 

Hyperspectral imaging has significant advantages in precise classification and identification of terrestrial features, thus it is also an important cutting-edge technology for acquiring geographic information. Over the past four decades, the development of hyperspectral remote sensing technology has revolutionized the scope, scale, content, and methods of geoscience research. Despite the high sensitivity of push-broom hyperspectral imagers, they suffer from limited swath and wavelength coverage. Jianxin Jia et al. from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Finnish Geospatial Research Institute have innovatively designed an airborne multimodular imaging spectrometer (AMMIS) that aims at achieving high spatial resolution, high spectral resolution, wide spectral coverage range, and large field-of-view imaging. AMMIS includes advancements in high-quality spectral spectrometry methods, compact optical design, and integrated layout. At present, AMMIS has been widely used in various fields such as ecological environment monitoring, mineral resource investigation, and land planning, laying a solid foundation for the design of the next generation airborne and spaceborne hyperspectral payloads.

 

Space-based microwave remote sensing is an important technology for acquiring geographic information about the Earth’s surface, including forests, water vapor, soil moisture, and crustal deformation. The frequent occurrence of ionospheric irregularities and scintillation phenomena in equatorial regions would adversely affect these measurements, but provide an alternative new way for probing ionosphere scintillation. Yifei Ji et al. from the National University of Defense Technology have developed a new technology that utilizes L-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) to detect ionospheric irregularity scintillation effects. This technology achieves an azimuth resolution of better than 100 m and a range resolution of better than one kilometer, demonstrating significant potential for revealing the temporal and spatial distribution characteristics and patterns of equatorial ionospheric irregularities. Ionospheric scintillation is also one of the significant error sources affecting high-precision satellite positioning. Under severe cases, it can lead to signal loss and interruption in receivers, making it impossible to provide positioning information. This new achievement is expected to greatly enhance satellite navigation positioning accuracy in areas prone to strong scintillation.

 

Urban planning represents a vital application area within geoinformation science. The effective arrangement and intensive utilization of urban buildings are crucial for increasing urban spatial capacity and addressing conflicts over land resources. Over the past few decades, rapid urbanization has led to a transformation in urban development from low-density two-dimensional (2D) sprawl to three-dimensional (3D) expansion. However, current measurements and studies of urban building space are primarily based on a horizontal 2D perspective. Xiaoping Liu et al. from Sun Yat-Sen University, in collaboration with Guangzhao Chen from The University of Hong Kong, have developed the first multi-factor dataset of 3D building space at a 500 m spatial resolution, named GUS-3D. The dataset finely characterizes the gradual decrease in 3D buildings from the city center to the outer edges across different global cities, confirming the dominant role of vertical expansion in 3D urban growth after 2000. It also highlights significant disparities in the supply and inequality of per capita 3D building space among global cities, with regions like India and South Africa providing only one-fourth of the global average, and the distribution being severely uneven. GUS-3D shows great potential to provide reliable foundational data for expanding various urban-related studies into a 3D perspective.

 

Our world serves as a vast information source. Precise positioning and geoinformation science have been extensively applied, while innovations in the geographic information industry—such as satellite navigation, electronic maps, and remote sensing imagery—are making remarkable advancements, profoundly changing people’s lives and work. This special issue has published one review paper and four research papers that address key issues in fields such as high-precision satellite positioning, earthquake monitoring, microwave remote sensing, hyperspectral remote sensing, and urban planning. These works serve as a good starting point for readers to explore methods for further improving satellite navigation precision, conducting real-time monitoring of geological disasters like earthquakes, obtaining accurate geographic information, and promoting sustainable urban development. Since technology shapes the future, we believe that with the ongoing efforts of numerous researchers, greater prosperity and wider application prospects will be achieved in the fields of precise positioning and geoinformation science.

 

Finally, we would like to express our sincere gratitude to the reviewers for their timely and professional comments during the publication process of this special issue. Your expert insights have ensured its high quality. We also wish to sincerely thank all authors of this special issue from countries including China, the United States, Finland, Chile, Indonesia, Luxembourg, and New Zealand. Your submissions have greatly contributed to the success of this special issue. Additionally, we extend our sincere appreciation to all editors and working staff of the journal. Your dedication has been vital to the achievement of this special issue.

 

Cite this article: Jiancheng Li, Weiping Jiang, Geospatial Information Technology Innovations: From Earth Monitoring to Urban Planning, Engineering, Volume 47, 2025, Pages 1-2, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eng.2024.11.002.

 

Click below to read the special issue:

https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/engineering/vol/47/suppl/C