Friday, February 06, 2026

 

Stacking the genetic deck: How some plant hybrids beat the odds



When cultivated tobacco is crossed with a wild relative it erases lethal genes, allowing normally fatal hybrids to survive.



Osaka Metropolitan University

Researchers discovered hybrid combinations capable of overcoming hybrid lethality and producing numerous offspring using tobacco as an experimental plant 

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(Left) Viable hybrid; (Right) Lethal hybrid

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Credit: Osaka Metropolitan University





In the plant world, when two different species mate, their offspring often don’t survive. The reason lies in their DNA: incompatible genes often mix in their offspring, triggering a fatal breakdown known as hybrid lethality that acts as a reproductive barrier to keep species separate.

Using tobacco plants and their wild relatives, a research group led by graduate student Shota Nagai and Associate Professor Takahiro Tezuka at the Graduate School of Agriculture, Osaka Metropolitan University, explored what happens when two species with a long evolutionary history attempt to hybridize. As expected, many of the resulting seedlings died shortly after sprouting, turning brown and collapsing from hybrid lethality. However, a larger-than-expected number of hybrids survived and grew normally.

By carefully cross-pollinating cultivated tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) with a wild species (Nicotiana amplexicaulis), the researchers tracked which seedlings lived and which died. They then examined the plants’ DNA, focusing on two genes known to trigger hybrid lethality when they interact; one from each parent species.

They found that in many of the surviving hybrids, one of the lethal genes had vanished. This disappearance appeared to be the result of a gene reshuffling process known as genome shock. When two very different genomes suddenly merge, the resulting instability can cause large-scale genetic changes such as rearrangements, silencing, or even deletion of entire gene regions. In this case, this reshuffling had erased the genetic trigger that would normally kill the hybrid.

“This finding challenges the long-held assumption that hybrid incompatibilities are fixed,” Professor Tezuka said. “Instead, the very act of hybridization can dismantle the genetic barriers meant to prevent it.”

There are practical implications for the research, as plant breeders often struggle to combine useful traits, such as disease resistance or drought tolerance, from different species. Understanding how genome shock removes genetic roadblocks could open new paths for crop improvement by breaking the reproductive barrier that normally stops different species from mixing. When they are broken, plants can mix genes across species, and this can eventually lead to the creation of new species.

“This research is expected to provide a starting point for overcoming reproductive isolation and achieving hybrid breeding,” Professor Tezuka said. “In plant breeding, hybrid breeding—the process of crossing genetically distinct plants to exchange genes—is widely practiced as a fundamental method. In hybrid breeding, interspecific crosses are performed not only between different strains of the same species but also to utilize more diverse variations. These results suggest how this could be done safely.”

Hybridization plays a major role in the evolution of wildflowers and crops. If genome shock neutralizes lethal gene combinations, it may help explain how new plant species arise rapidly, especially when previously isolated species come into contact with each other.

The findings were published in Frontiers in Plant Science.

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About OMU 

Established in Osaka as one of the largest public universities in Japan, Osaka Metropolitan University is committed to shaping the future of society through “Convergence of Knowledge” and the promotion of world-class research. For more research news, visit https://www.omu.ac.jp/en/ and follow us on social media: XFacebookInstagramLinkedIn.

 

KRICT demonstrates 100kg per day sustainable aviation fuel production from landfill gas



Joint research by KRICT and EN2CORE Technology validates an integrated process that produces aviation fuel from abundant landfill gas—more readily available than used cooking oil—demonstrating the feasibility of decentralized SAF production



National Research Council of Science & Technology

Dr. Seungju Han, Dr. Yunjo LEE(from the right) and research team at KRICT 

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Research team at KRICT

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Credit: Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology(KRICT)




The aviation industry accounts for a significant share of global carbon emissions. In response, the international community is expanding mandatory use of Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF), which is produced from organic waste or biomass and is expected to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions compared to conventional fossil-based jet fuel. However, high production costs remain a major challenge, leading some airlines in Europe and Japan to pass SAF-related costs on to consumers.

Against this backdrop, a research team led by Dr. Yun-Jo Lee at the Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology (KRICT), in collaboration with EN2CORE Technology Co., Ltd., has successfully demonstrated an integrated process that converts landfill gas generated from organic waste—such as food waste—into aviation fuel.

Currently, the refining industry mainly produces SAF from used cooking oil. However, used cooking oil is limited in supply and is also used for other applications such as biodiesel, making it relatively expensive and difficult to secure in large quantities. In contrast, landfill gas generated from food waste and livestock manure is abundant and inexpensive. This study represents the first domestic demonstration of aviation fuel production using landfill gas as the primary feedstock.

Producing aviation fuel from landfill gas requires overcoming two major challenges: purifying the gas to obtain suitable intermediates and improving the efficiency of converting gaseous intermediates into liquid fuels. The research team addressed these challenges by developing an integrated process encompassing landfill gas pretreatment, syngas production, and catalytic conversion of syngas into liquid fuels.

EN2CORE Technology was responsible for the upstream processes. Landfill gas collected from waste disposal sites is desulfurized and treated using membrane-based separation to reduce excess carbon dioxide. The purified gas is then converted into synthesis gas—containing carbon monoxide and hydrogen—using a proprietary plasma reforming reactor, and subsequently supplied to KRICT.

KRICT applied the Fischer–Tropsch process to convert the gaseous syngas into liquid fuels. In this process, hydrogen and carbon react on a catalyst surface to form hydrocarbon chains. Hydrocarbons of appropriate chain length become liquid fuels, while longer chains form solid byproducts such as wax. By employing zeolite- and cobalt-based catalysts, KRICT significantly improved selectivity toward liquid fuels rather than solid byproducts.

A key innovation of this work is the application of a microchannel reactor. Excessive heat generation during aviation fuel synthesis can damage catalysts and reduce process stability. The microchannel reactor developed by the team features alternating layers of catalyst and coolant channels, enabling rapid heat removal and suppression of thermal runaway. Through integrated and modular design, the reactor volume was reduced by up to one-tenth compared to conventional systems. Production capacity can be expanded simply by adding modules.

For demonstration purposes, the team constructed an integrated pilot facility on a landfill site in Dalseong-gun, Daegu. The facility, approximately 100 square meters in size and comparable to a two-story detached house, successfully produced 100 kg of sustainable aviation fuel per day, achieving a liquid fuel selectivity exceeding 75 percent. The team is currently optimizing long-term operation conditions and further enhancing catalyst and reactor performance.

This achievement demonstrates the potential to convert everyday waste-derived gases from food waste and sewage sludge into high-value aviation fuel. Moreover, it shows that aviation fuel production—previously limited to large-scale centralized plants—can be realized at local landfills or small waste treatment facilities. The technology is therefore expected to contribute to the establishment of decentralized SAF production systems and strengthen the competitiveness of Korea’s SAF industry.

The research team noted that the work is significant in securing an integrated process technology that converts organic waste into high-value fuels. KRICT President Young-Kuk Lee stated that the technology has strong potential to become a representative solution capable of achieving both carbon neutrality and a circular economy.

The development of two catalysts enabling selective production of liquid fuels was published as an inside cover article in ACS Catalysis (November 2025) and in Fuel (January 2026).

 

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KRICT is a non-profit research institute funded by the Korean government. Since its foundation in 1976, KRICT has played a leading role in advancing national chemical technologies in the fields of chemistry, material science, environmental science, and chemical engineering. Now, KRICT is moving forward to become a globally leading research institute tackling the most challenging issues in the field of Chemistry and Engineering and will continue to fulfill its role in developing chemical technologies that benefit the entire world and contribute to maintaining a healthy planet. More detailed information on KRICT can be found at https://www.krict.re.kr/eng/

This research was supported by “Development of integrated demonstration process for the production of bio naphtha/lubricant oil from organic waste-derived biogas” (Project No. RS-2022-NR068680) through the National Research Foundation (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT), Republic of Korea.

Facility for Converting Landfill Gas into Syngas (CO and H₂) Suitable for SAF Production

Unlike conventional systems, the use of miniaturized and modular microchannel reactors enables facility deployment at a small scale.

Credit

Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology(KRICT)









 

Waste chitin transformed into high-performance porous carbons for greenhouse gas recovery



Chemical-free steam activation enables tunable pore structures for efficient n-butane adsorption and desorption




Journal of Bioresources and Bioproducts

Waste Chitin Transformed into High-Performance Porous Carbons for Greenhouse Gas Recovery 

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Chemical-free steam activation enables tunable pore structures for efficient n-butane adsorption and desorption

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Credit: Materials Application Research Institute, Jeonju University, Jeonju 55069, South Korea






The mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions increasingly relies on advanced adsorption materials capable of capturing and releasing hydrocarbons efficiently under repeated operating cycles. Porous carbons are widely used in gas separation, emission control, and recovery systems due to their high surface area and chemical stability. However, conventional activated carbons are often produced from high-quality precursors through chemical activation routes that involve corrosive reagents, generate wastewater, and increase overall production costs.
In a study published in Journal of Bioresources and Bioproducts, waste chitinous biomass is presented as a sustainable and scalable precursor for porous carbon production. Chitin, a nitrogen-containing polysaccharide abundant in crustacean shells and insect exoskeletons, is generated in large quantities as a by-product of food processing and the rapidly expanding insect-farming industry. Rather than converting chitin into chitosan through costly chemical treatments, the reported work directly upcycles chitin into functional porous carbons.
The researchers employed a two-step process consisting of carbonization followed by steam activation, using only nitrogen and water vapor. This chemical-free approach eliminates post-treatment washing and avoids secondary waste generation. By varying the activation time between 10 and 60 minutes, the pore structure of the resulting chitin-derived porous carbons could be precisely tuned. The materials exhibited specific surface areas ranging from 720 to 1,350 m2 g-1 and developed a hierarchical pore network combining micropores and mesopores.
Detailed structural analysis revealed that micropores in the range of 1–3 nm were primarily formed during the early stages of activation through oxidation of amorphous carbon domains, while mesopores of 3–5 nm developed progressively due to edge-site oxidation of carbon crystallites. This controlled pore evolution proved critical for gas recovery performance. n-Butane adsorption capacity increased steadily with activation time, reaching a maximum adsorption activity of 43.6%, while residual adsorption decreased, indicating improved desorption efficiency.
Importantly, the study established a clear correlation between pore size distribution and gas recovery behavior. Adsorption capacity was strongly associated with micropores of 1–3 nm, whereas desorption efficiency depended on the presence of larger mesopores. This structure–performance relationship provides mechanistic guidance for designing porous carbons optimized for cyclic adsorption–desorption processes, such as those used in evaporative emission control systems.
When benchmarked against biomass-derived and commercial activated carbons, the chitin-based porous carbons demonstrated competitive butane working capacity despite being produced through a simpler and more environmentally benign route. The authors note that further optimization through pelletization and mechanical strengthening could enhance their suitability for industrial applications.
Beyond performance metrics, the work highlights the sustainability advantages of combining abundant waste biomass with a scalable activation process compatible with existing industrial furnaces. By minimizing chemical inputs and utilizing underexploited bioresources, the reported strategy offers a practical pathway toward low-carbon, circular production of advanced adsorbent materials.

 

See the article:

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jobab.2026.100236

Original Source URL

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2369969826000083

Journal

Journal of Bioresources and Bioproducts

 

WHO calls for mental health to be central to neglected tropical disease care




Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine




A major new World Health Organization publication sets out, for the first time, a practical, evidence-based package of care to address the mental health impacts of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) and the stigma that can prevent people from seeking care and participating fully in society.

The Essential care package to address mental health and stigma for persons with neglected tropical diseases responds to growing evidence that people living with NTDs experience higher rates of depression, anxiety, distress and suicidal behaviours than the general population, driven not only by the direct effects of illness but by stigma, discrimination and social exclusion.

The Essential Care Package (ECP) provides governments, health leaders, and frontline services with clear guidance on integrating mental health support and stigma reduction into existing NTD programmes and health systems, including prevention, identification, assessment, management, and follow-up.

With more than one billion people affected by NTDs worldwide, the ECP argues that progress towards elimination will be limited unless mental health and stigma are treated as a core part of disease management rather than an add-on.

“NTDs take a far greater toll on mental and social well‑being than is often recognised,” said Dr Daniel Ngamije Madandi, Director of the WHO Department of Malaria and Neglected Tropical Diseases. “By integrating mental health and tackling stigma head‑on, the Essential care package (ECP)  equips countries to confront the full reality of NTDs and move closer to WHO’s vision of complete well‑being.”

The ECP sets out clear, practical actions to integrate mental health care and stigma reduction into NTD services, with defined responsibilities across people living with NTDs, communities, health workers and system leaders. It calls for people affected by NTDs to be supported to recognise distress, know where and how to seek help, access peer support, and understand their right to health care, employment and community life. Families and communities are identified as critical to recognising distress early, supporting help-seeking, and challenging attitudes and behaviours that drive stigma and exclusion.

Professor Julian Eaton, Senior Lecturer in Global Mental Health at Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, said: “Integration does not work when it is treated as an extra checkbox for already stretched services. This package is invaluable because it sets out what good integration looks like in practice, from involving people with lived experience in service design, to routine screening and compassionate care, to referral pathways and peer support that reduce isolation and self-stigma.

“If we want NTD programmes to succeed, we have to take stigma and mental health seriously as part of meeting overall needs, not as a separate issue.”

For frontline health workers, the ECP focuses on routine, compassionate, person-centred care. It recommends that mental health assessment and support are embedded within NTD services, including basic psychoeducation, screening and clear referral pathways to peer support, physical health care and specialist mental health services. Training is emphasised not only to build clinical skills, but also to reduce stigmatising attitudes within services and ensure that comorbid mental health needs are recorded.

At a system level, the ECP stresses that integration requires coordinated planning between NTD and mental health programmes rather than parallel delivery. This includes strengthening community-based supports such as peer groups, incorporating mental health indicators into routine NTD data collection, and exploring collaborative care models such as embedding mental health care specialists within NTD services.

Together, these measures aim to make integrated care feasible in resource-constrained settings, improving wellbeing, strengthening treatment adherence and supporting progress towards NTD elimination and universal health coverage.

The ECP was developed by World Health Organization and a broad international partnership spanning NGOs, academia and organisations representing people affected by NTDs.

The ECP was developed by WHO, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Neglected Tropical Disease NGO Network cross-cutting group on Disease Management, Disability and Inclusion, CBM Global Disability Inclusion, The Leprosy Mission, Netherlands Leprosy Mission, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, The Carter Center, Lepra, Effect Hope, the International Federation of Anti Leprosy Associations and its Advisory Panel of Persons Affected by Leprosy, infoNTD, the Anesvad Foundation and others.

ENDS