Thursday, June 04, 2026

 

New MOF material harvests water from air in ultra-dry conditions




KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.

Synthesis and Water Harvesting Performance of M-Gallate MOFs. 

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Synthesis and Water Harvesting Performance of M-Gallate MOFs.

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Credit: Jianji Wang






Researchers at Henan Normal University have developed a new metal-organic framework (MOF) capable of harvesting water directly from the air in extremely dry environments, offering a potential solution for regions facing severe water scarcity.

The study, published in Green Chemical Engineering,  focuses on gallate-based MOFs made from low-cost materials including magnesium, cobalt, and nickel. Among them, the magnesium-based material, Mg-gallate, showed the strongest performance, capturing 170 mg of water per gram at just 0.2% relative humidity (RH), one of the highest water uptake capacities reported for porous materials under such ultra-low humidity conditions.

Atmospheric water harvesting is being explored as a sustainable solution to the growing global water crisis, particularly in arid regions where traditional adsorbent materials struggle to function efficiently. Current technologies often lose effectiveness in environments with very low moisture levels, such as deserts.

The researchers found that Mg-gallate combines strong water adsorption capacity with excellent stability. The material remained structurally stable after 28 days in water and maintained strong performance after 20 adsorption-desorption cycles. It also demonstrated high selectivity for water molecules over nitrogen, making it suitable for extracting water directly from air.

In particular, the material's performance is driven by hydrogen-bonding interactions between water molecules and oxygen-containing groups inside the MOF structure, alongside ultramicroporous channel filling effects. The MOF was successfully produced on a gram scale using inexpensive raw materials and standard laboratory methods, highlighting its potential for future large-scale production.

The researchers believe the technology could support atmospheric water harvesting in deserts and other ultra-dry environments, while also offering potential applications in semiconductor dehumidification, electronics protection, natural gas dehydration, and even space-based water recovery systems.

"Water scarcity is one of the most pressing survival challenges facing humanity in the coming decades. What makes Mg-gallate particularly exciting is that it works precisely where other materials give up: at the edge of detectability for humidity," says corresponding author Jianji Wang. "We are not just improving on existing benchmarks by a small margin; at 0.2% relative humidity, this material is operating in territory that was essentially inaccessible before. And because we can synthesise it in gram quantities from inexpensive, commercially available starting materials, there is a genuine path from the laboratory to real-world deployment."

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Contact the author: Jianji Wang, Henan Normal University, jwang@htu.edu.cn

The publisher KeAi was established by Elsevier and China Science Publishing & Media Ltd to unfold quality research globally. In 2013, our focus shifted to open access publishing. We now proudly publish more than 200 world-class, open access, English language journals, spanning all scientific disciplines. Many of these are titles we publish in partnership with prestigious societies and academic institutions, such as the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC).

 

NTU Singapore scientists develop cleaner way to recycle mixed plastic packaging




Nanyang Technological University
NTU Singapore scientists develop cleaner way to recycle mixed plastic packaging 

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(L-R) The NTU Singapore research team behind the depolymerisation-induced polymer separation (DIPS) process include Dr Liang Yen Nan, Senior Research Fellow, Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute (NEWRI); Kathirvel Periasamy, PhD student; and Professor Hu Xiao, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Programme Director for Sustainable Chemistry and Materials, NEWRI.

 

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Credit: NTU Singapore





Scientists from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have developed a new method to recycle mixed plastic packaging without using harmful chemical solvents – an approach that could make one of the world's most difficult waste streams significantly easier to handle.

The research team from NTU Singapore's School of Materials Science and Engineering and Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute (NEWRI) has introduced a process called depolymerisation-induced polymer separation, or DIPS. The method selectively breaks down one type of plastic in mixed plastic packaging while leaving the other plastics intact, allowing each material to be recovered and reused.

Addressing a global recycling challenge

Mixed plastic packaging, commonly used to wrap snacks, instant noodles and other food products, is designed to be tough and airtight. The packaging is made up of several different plastics bonded tightly together, making it challenging to recycle. Even if recycled, the material is often of low quality and has little commercial value. 

As a result, most multilayer packaging ends up in landfills or incinerators, adding to a fast-growing waste burden. Global plastic production is projected to reach 736 million tonnes [1] by 2040.

Lead investigator Professor Hu Xiao, who is also the Programme Director for Sustainable Chemistry and Materials at NEWRI, said: “We’re seeing more mixed plastic packaging used in everyday food products, but recycling it safely and efficiently is still a major challenge. Our team set out to tackle this by developing a practical, scalable way to separate these materials without using harmful solvents."

Study co-author Dr Liang Yen Nan, who is also Senior Research Fellow, NEWRI, said: “One of the biggest hurdles in plastic recycling today is the lack of a viable way to deal with mixed plastics. This project was driven by that challenge, and our goal is to help move the industry closer to a solution that works in the real world.”

A solvent-free, continuous process

The DIPS method uses a technique called reactive extrusion, a solvent-free, continuous industrial process in which an extruder machine – a device commonly used in manufacturing to melt and shape plastics – doubles as a chemical reactor.

During processing of mixed plastic packaging, poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) – the plastic commonly used for drink bottles – reacts with glycerol, a cheap and widely available reagent, and is selectively broken down into smaller molecules. This PET-derived material has a different physical and chemical nature from the original plastic, causing it to naturally separate from polypropylene (PP), another common plastic used in packaging.

The separation happens automatically during processing, driven by differences in the materials' polarity (a feature that determines solubility) and viscosity (a material’s resistance to deformation under force).

The entire process runs at room pressure and without any solvents, making it safer and potentially more cost-effective than conventional chemical recycling approaches.

High-quality recycled materials

In laboratory tests, the recovered PP retained mechanical properties close to those of virgin plastic, achieving up to 90 per cent of its original tensile strength (maximum stress a material can sustain before it breaks) under optimal conditions – meaning the recycled material is strong enough for practical reuse.

Using samples from post-industrial mixed packaging waste, the method successfully separated the plastic components and produced significantly better material quality compared to conventional mechanical recycling approaches.

While the recovered PET cannot be directly reused, it contains chemical groups that make it potentially useful for higher-value applications such as specialty materials to replace epoxy used in wind turbine blades or for conversion into a monomer (building block of a polymer).

The researchers believe the DIPS approach can be extended to other mixed plastic combinations and scaled up using commonly used industrial extrusion equipment.

First author Kathirvel Periasamy, a PhD student and Provost Graduate Awardee under NTU’s flagship Interdisciplinary Graduate Programme, said: “Our process attempts to bridge the gap between laboratory research and industrial application. By simplifying separation and eliminating solvents, we aim to make plastic recycling more economically viable and environmentally sustainable."

If mixed plastic waste were efficiently recycled at scale, it could unlock an economic value estimated at more than US$250 billion annually [2].

As a next step, the research team plans to collaborate with industry partners to validate the approach under scaled-up conditions and welcomes interest from potential collaborators.

 

[1] OECD Policy Scenarios for Eliminating Plastic Pollution by 2040; OECD, 2024.

[2] OECD Global Material Resources Outlook to 2060: Economic Drivers and Environmental Consequences; OECD, 2019.

NTU Singapore scientists develop cleaner way to recycle mixed plastic packaging 

During the processing of mixed plastic packaging using the depolymerisation-induced polymer separation (DIPS) method, poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) and polypropylene (PP) are recovered.


 

Credit

NTU Singapore



 

Toward “vibe medicine”: a self-evolving multi-agent framework for clinical decision support





KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
System architecture of the VIBEMed framework, consisting of the multi-agent collaborative framework, three-level self-evolution mechanism and an architecture-level safety sandbox. 

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System architecture of the VIBEMed framework, consisting of the multi-agent collaborative framework, three-level self-evolution mechanism and an architecture-level safety sandbox.

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Credit: Lian Zhang






Large language models (LLMs) and AI agents have shown strong potential in medical imaging analysis, diagnosis, and treatment planning. However, most current medical AI systems still rely on pre-trained knowledge and fixed workflows. This limitation hinders their ability to learn from long-term clinical feedback, patient outcomes, or previous treatment experience, making it difficult for them to adapt to the complexity of real-world clinical practice.

To address this challenge, a team led by Dr. Lian Zhang from the First Hospital of Hebei Medical University, proposed the concept of "Vibe Medicine" and developed VIBEMed (Versatile Intelligent Behavior-Evolving Medical framework).

"VIBEMed uses multi-agent collaboration to break complex clinical decisions into three specialist roles: the Clinical Diagnostic Agent (CDA) for diagnostic reasoning and hypothesis generation, the Therapeutic Execution Agent (TEA) for treatment planning, and the Clinical Evolution Manager Agent (CEMA) for integrating longitudinal feedback and driving continuous optimization," shares co-corresponding author Lian Zhang.

Unlike conventional single-model approaches, VIBEMed further implements a three-level self-evolution mechanism spanning memory, model, and code, improving the performance of the backbone LLM and system over time. It also employs an architecture-level safety sandbox to constrain model updates and data access, ensuring that continuous evolution remains safe, controllable, and traceable.

The team then validated VIBEMed in complex clinical scenarios. Compared with traditional single-model pipelines. "The framework demonstrated superior performance in complex medical reasoning and treatment planning tasks," says Zhang. "VIBEMed presents an experience-driven medical AI system with strong adaptive capabilities, offering a practical direction for clinical decision-support systems that can learn continuously and evolve safely."

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Contact the author: Lian Zhang, the First Hospital of Hebei Medical University, lianzhang@hebmu.edu.cn

The publisher KeAi was established by Elsevier and China Science Publishing & Media Ltd to unfold quality research globally. In 2013, our focus shifted to open access publishing. We now proudly publish more than 200 world-class, open access, English language journals, spanning all scientific disciplines. Many of these are titles we publish in partnership with prestigious societies and academic institutions, such as the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC).

 

Genetically modified hookworms produce and deliver therapeutics



Bioengineered parasites could serve as long-term drug factories for hosts



Washington University in St. Louis

How hookworms deliver medicine 

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WashU Medicine researchers genetically modified hookworms to produce and deliver a therapeutic antibody inside a host, a proof-of-concept that could lead to long-lasting treatments for chronic disease or exposure to toxins in remote settings.

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Credit: Sara Moser/WashU Medicine




Hookworms, intestinal parasites that infect hundreds of millions of people in under-resourced tropical regions around the globe, have evolved to survive inside the human gut for years, secreting molecules that enable co-existence with their hosts. Now, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have harnessed that biological mechanism for potential human benefit, engineering a hookworm to produce and deliver a drug within a living host.

In a new study, the team reports the first successful genetic modification of the human hookworm. It was designed to produce an antibody that neutralizes tetrodotoxin, a deadly neurotoxin produced by pufferfish and other marine animals. After colonizing an animal host with the modified hookworms, the parasites produced the antitoxin and secreted it into the bloodstream, partially inactivating the toxin.

The findings demonstrate that this drug production and delivery approach could be a long-term solution to any number of medical needs, from chronic conditions requiring continuous drug treatment to exposure to toxins in remote locations without medical care available.

The findings were published June 3 in Nature Communications.

“The hookworm has spent millions of years perfecting how to assure long-term survival inside a human host and how to get molecules out of its body and into ours,” said senior author Makedonka Mitreva, PhD, the Gordon R. Miller Professor in the John T. Milliken Department of Medicine’s Division of Infectious Diseases at WashU Medicine. “We asked: What if we could add one more molecule to the roughly 1,000 things the worm already secretes, something therapeutically useful to people? This study shows that’s not just a concept. It works.”

A parasite that delivers

Hookworms have already been studied as treatments for inflammatory bowel diseases such as ulcerative colitis, based on evidence that the anti-inflammatory molecules the worms secrete can dampen the immune responses that drive those conditions. Mitreva’s team set out to build on that foundation by engineering the worm to secrete a therapeutic of the researchers’ choosing, rather than relying solely on what the parasite produces naturally.

The appeal of hookworms as a long-term drug production and delivery platform stems from a quirk of their biology. When a person is infected with a controlled number of hookworm larvae, which can be administered orally as a pill or through the skin like a lotion, the worms migrate to the small intestine and take up residence, often for years. Because they cannot multiply inside the host, the number of worms stays fixed, and the infection remains controlled. If the infection ever needs to be cleared, a single dose of an oral anti-parasitic drug eliminates the hookworms within 24 hours.

Although natural hookworm infection may cause only mild digestive symptoms in healthy adults, chronic infection with large number of hookworms can be dangerous for children, pregnant people and malnourished or otherwise vulnerable individuals, leading to anemia, poor growth and development, pregnancy complications and, in extreme untreated cases, heart problems or death. This underscores the importance of keeping the infection strictly controlled for therapeutic use, Mitreva noted, which is possible because of the worms’ inability to reproduce without spending part of their life cycle in soil.

The antibody selected for this proof-of-concept study neutralizes tetrodotoxin, a paralyzing and potentially lethal toxin with no antidote. The work was funded by the U.S. government’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, with an eye toward finding solutions to biological and chemical threats to soldiers in remote locations.

The project presented significant technical hurdles: gene-editing tools that work in other organisms had not been adapted for hookworms, and no one had previously achieved stable genetic modification in the species.

To adapt hookworms for therapeutic use, Mitreva and her team drew on more than two decades of hookworm genomics research conducted at WashU Medicine. This depth of data helped them understand the organism’s biology from the cellular to the genetic level, allowing them to locate a viable site in the genome to insert the new gene carrying instructions for making the new antitoxin. Critically, they had to ensure the insertion wouldn’t disrupt surrounding gene activity and would prompt the worm to secrete the antitoxin out into the host.

The effort was successful: Blood collected from hamsters infected with Mitreva’s genetically modified hookworms partially neutralized tetrodotoxin, whereas blood from animals infected with unmodified worms had no neutralizing capability.

From proof-of-concept to broader platform

Mitreva noted that the level of neutralization achieved in this initial study, while significant, likely represents only a fraction of what the platform can ultimately deliver.

Several components of what she calls a “configurable chassis” are still being optimized to increase the amount of therapeutic protein produced and secreted. Because the worm resides in the gut and a substantial portion of what it secretes remains there, rather than entering the bloodstream, the researchers expect that concentrations of therapeutic molecules in the intestine may be substantially higher than what was detected in circulation in this study, making the platform suitable for gut-directed therapies.

“What we demonstrated here is that the concept works end to end — you can insert a gene, the worm produces the protein, the protein gets out of the worm, and it is functionally active in the host,” Mitreva said. “From that starting point, we can optimize the platform and think carefully about which diseases stand to benefit most from a delivery system that is continuous, targeted and long-lasting. That’s a fundamentally different kind of pharmaceutical biofactory platform, and we think it opens possibilities that are very hard to achieve with any other platform.”

Gut inflammatory diseases, including Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis, and food allergies are among the conditions Mitreva sees as strong candidates for future development. Diseases requiring small but sustained therapeutic concentrations, where compliance with repeated injections or infusions is a barrier, may also be well-suited to the platform.

Future studies will need to conduct rigorous safety evaluations before human use. Mitreva noted that biocontainment strategies, such as engineering the worms to be unable to produce eggs, are under consideration to protect hosts and their environments as the platform advances.

 

Singh KS, Bharti S, Rosa BA, Bigham M, Uzoechi SC, Choi YJ, Martin JC, Kemper D, Pavlovic Djuranovic S, Pickering DA, Ryan R, Bracken BK, Bottazzi ME, Carnes E, Ittiprasert W, Moyle M, Brindley PJ, Loukas A, Djuranovic S, Mitreva M. Transgenic hookworm secretes anti-tetrodotoxin human single chain antibody. Nature Communications. June 3, 2026. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-73447-9

K.S.S., S.B., B.A.R., M.B., S.C.U., Y.J.C., J.C.M., D.K., S.P.D., D.A.P., R.R., B.K.B., M.E.B., W.I., M.Moyle, P.J.B., A.L., S.D. and M.M. disclose support for the research of this work from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and Naval Information Warfare Center Pacific (NIWC Pacific) [Contract No. N66001-21-C-4013]. E.C.C. discloses support for the research of this work from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) [Contract No. N660012314009]. The views, opinions and/or findings expressed are those of the author and should not be interpreted as representing the official views or policies of the Department of Defense or the U.S. Government. Distribution Statement “A” (Approved for Public Release, Distribution Unlimited).

About WashU Medicine

WashU Medicine is a global leader in academic medicine, including biomedical research, patient care and educational programs with 3,100 faculty. Its National Institutes of Health (NIH) research funding portfolio is the second largest among U.S. medical schools and has grown 78% since 2016. Together with institutional investment, WashU Medicine commits over $1.6 billion annually to basic and clinical research innovation and training. Its faculty practice is consistently among the top five in the country, with more than 2,550 faculty physicians practicing at 200 locations. WashU Medicine physicians exclusively staff Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals — the academic hospitals of BJC HealthCare — and Siteman Cancer Center, a partnership between BJC HealthCare and WashU Medicine and the only National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center in Missouri and southern Illinois. WashU Medicine physicians also treat patients at BJC’s community hospitals in our region. With a storied history in MD/PhD training, WashU Medicine recently dedicated $100 million to scholarships and curriculum renewal for its medical students, and is home to top-notch training programs in every medical subspecialty as well as physical therapy, occupational therapy, and audiology and communications sciences.

 

Hail conditions on the move as winter crops face rising risk





University of New South Wales




A hailstorm can undo a season’s work in minutes. It can strike quickly and unevenly, shredding wheat, bruising fruit, flattening crops – while also leaving neighbouring paddocks untouched.

In a new Nature Climate Change study, scientists from UNSW Sydney say the geography and seasonality of that risk is changing.

As the planet warms, the atmospheric conditions that produce damaging hail are projected to shift away from some warmer regions towards the cooler parts of the world – including south-eastern Australia and New Zealand.

Lead author Dr Tim Raupach from the UNSW Institute of Climate Risk and Response says this is part of an overall hail condition frequency shift towards the poles.

“Under modelling scenarios of 2°C and 3°C of global warming, we see this overall shift towards more risk in cooler places and cooler times of the year,” Dr Raupach says.

“So increasing risk in winter and often decreasing risk in summer – a shift from warmer to cooler regions and seasons,” he says. “Those cooler regions include not only parts of southern Australia and New Zealand, but northern North America and Europe.

“And there are decreases – though still with a lot of uncertainty – in the subtropics and parts of the mid-latitudes. This includes much of Australia as well as regions of India, China and much of Africa.”

An atmospheric tug of war

Because hailstorms are brief and difficult to observe, the researchers did not model hailstones directly. Instead, they used three different proxies, or methods, to detect atmospheric conditions that occur when hail is more likely to form.

These proxies did not always agree, particularly in the tropics, underscoring how difficult future hail risk remains to predict. The disagreement showed that with a warmer atmosphere, several forces act at the same time.

“Usually, as the atmosphere gets warmer, we expect it to have more energy, which could be turned into updrafts,” Dr Raupach says. Updrafts are a key feature of hailstorms.

“When you have these strong winds in the thunderstorms, they can support the growth of larger hailstones,” he says.

At the same time, warmer air also raises the level at which frozen hailstones begin to melt.

“There is a lot more melting in a warmer atmosphere,” Dr Raupach says.

“This can make smaller hailstones melt away.”

The result is an offsetting effect, or an atmospheric tug of war, where warming pushes the system in two directions at once.

“The atmosphere might be more prone to create storms, but the storms that are created might be less likely to have hail reach the ground,” Dr Raupach says.

However, he says the concern is that while hail may become less common across some regions or seasons, they may be more destructive when they do happen.

“Larger hailstones are more likely with stronger storm dynamics,” he says. “That still has important implications for agriculture.”

Winter crops in the firing line

A decrease in summer hail risk also does not necessarily help a winter crop if the danger rises during growing season.

The researchers examined 26 major crop types globally.

“One of the things that makes this study unique is that we looked at the changes in risk to crops based on the hazard changes that we see in the hail-prone environments,” Dr Raupach says.

He and the team looked at what proportion of each crop’s growing season was likely to be affected by hail-prone conditions, and how that exposure changed in future climate projections.

“We saw in the future projections that often the hazard was increasing for winter crops.”

In Australia, where wheat is a major winter crop, the signal is clearest in the south-east – from Tasmania up along the broad arc from Melbourne towards Sydney – where hail-prone environment increases appear in both past trends and future projections.

Risk planning

A crop does not even need to be damaged often for hail to matter – just one severe storm is enough. But for farmers, insurers and policymakers, it is a difficult risk to plan around.

The findings also complicate some assumptions about climate adaptation. As global warming forces crop-growing regions to shift poleward, agriculture may also move into areas where hail risk is increasing.

This means that potential gains from a warmer climate, such as new growing zones or longer seasons in cooler regions, could be offset by exposure to more damaging storm conditions.

Dr Raupach says the uncertainty surrounding future hail risk remains a major challenge.

“It’s hard,” he says. “The uncertainty of it and the difficulty in getting at exactly what’s going on is one of the challenges that we face, and that decision-makers face.

“But we can make broad statements. And the shift towards the poles is the broad statement we can make here.”

Dr Joanna Aldridge is the Head of Research & Development, Catastrophes at QBE, which supported the research.

She says this work is building the scientific evidence base needed to understand how hail risk is shifting.

“This enables better risk assessment, resilience planning and decision-making across industries such as insurance and agriculture,” Dr Aldridge says.

On the move

For Australia, another broad statement concerns the south-east of the continent.

“The southeast of Australia comes up not only in the trends that we see in the past, but also in the future projections as a place where the hazard is increasing,” Dr Raupach says.

While hail has often received less public attention than other climate-linked agricultural threats – such as drought, heatwaves, floods and bushfires – for farmers it can be one of the most immediate and damaging hazards.

The study warns these overlapping shifts “may attenuate any positive impact on crop yields in a warming world”.

 

Dr Tim Raupach’s position at UNSW is supported by QBE Insurance. Dr Raupach and study co-author Professor Steven Sherwood are affiliated with the UNSW Climate Change Research Centre and the ARC Centre of Excellence for 21st Century Weather – where Dr Raupach is an Associate Investigator and Prof. Sherwood is a Chief Investigator.