Wednesday, February 26, 2025

 

Scientists build robot to track plant-fungal trade networks, revealing nature’s underground supply chains



New research uses advanced robotics to track the hyper-efficient supply chains formed between plants and mycorrhizal fungi as they trade carbon and nutrients across the complex, living networks that help regulate the Earth’s atmosphere and ecosystems.



SPUN (Society for the Protection of Underground Networks)

Video of high-speed flows and bi-directional movement inside mycorrhizal fungus Rhizophagus irregularis. False color for contrast 

video: 

Video of high-speed flows and bi-directional movement inside mycorrhizal fungus Rhizophagus irregularis. False color for contrast

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Credit: Loreto Oyarte Gálvez - VU Amsterdam/AMOLF




  • By tracking half a million fungal highways and the traffic flows within them, researchers describe how plants and symbiotic fungi build efficient supply chains
  • The team built an imaging robot that allowed them to gather 100 years’ worth of microscopy data in under 3 years
  • Work advances our understanding of how fungi move billions of tons of CO2e into underground ecosystems each year

New research publishing in the journal Nature on February 26, 2025 uses advanced robotics to track the hyper-efficient supply chains formed between plants and mycorrhizal fungi as they trade carbon and nutrients across the complex, living networks that help regulate Earth’s atmosphere and ecosystems.

Travelling waves, traffic flows, and navigating pathfinders

Understanding plant-fungal trade is urgent because these fungal networks draw down around 13 billion tons of CO2 per year into the soil -- equivalent to ~1/3 of global energy-related emissions.  More than 80% of plant species on Earth form partnerships with mycorrhizal fungi, in which phosphorus and nitrogen collected by fungi is exchanged for plant carbon. Despite their global importance, scientists did not understand how these brainless organisms construct expansive and efficient supply chains across their underground networks.  

Using a custom-built imaging robot, the international research team of 28 scientists discovered that the fungi construct a lace-like mycelial network that moves carbon outward from plant roots in a wave-like formation. To support this growth, fungi move resources to-and-from plant roots using a system of two-way traffic, controlling flow speed and width of these fungal highways as needed. To seek further resources, the fungi deployed special growing branches as microscopic ‘pathfinders’ to explore new territory, appearing to favor trade opportunities with future plant partners over short-term growth within immediate surroundings. The researchers describe how these behaviors appear to be coordinated by simple, local “rules” that prevent the fungus from “over-building” and define a unique ‘travelling wave strategy’ for growth, resource exploration, and trade.

“We’ve been mapping the decentralized decision-making processes of mycorrhizal fungal networks, exposing a hyper-efficient blueprint for an underground supply chain,” said Evolutionary Biologist and co-author Dr. Toby Kiers of Amsterdam’s Vrije Universiteit. “Humans increasingly rely on AI algorithms to build supply chains that are efficient and resilient. Yet mycorrhizal fungi have been solving these problems for more than 450 million years. This is the kind of research that keeps you up at night because these fungi are such important underground circulatory systems for nutrients and carbon.”

Advanced robotics to track fungal decision-making

Discovering these new fungal behaviors was only possible because the team built an imaging robot that ran 24/7 in Amsterdam, allowing measurements of how the fungi reshaped their trade routes over time and space. “We discovered that these fungi are constantly adapting their trade routes, adding loops to shorten paths so they could efficiently deliver nutrients to plant roots” said Dr. Thomas Shimizu, co-author and Biophysicist from the physics institute AMOLF in Amsterdam.

Similar to navigation apps tracking congestion, the team then measured “traffic flows” at specific coordinates in the fungal road system, quantifying how fast resources were flowing to and from the root, tracking more than 100,000 particle flows. “By using our robot instead of a human being, we cut the lab time from a century to around three years”, added Shimizu.

“Robotics is making it possible to study fungal behavior in unprecedented detail, and at an unprecedented scale,” said co-author Dr. Merlin Sheldrake. “These techniques open the door to future work to understand the ways that these living, sensing, networks regulate ecosystem function and the Earth’s nutrient cycles”.

Data critical for understanding carbon draw down

The data collected are becoming increasingly important as atmospheric CO2 increases. Scientists want to understand how fungal networks control flows of carbon belowground. Kiers, also Executive Director of the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks  (SPUN), the non-profit organization mapping Earth’s mycorrhizal networks adds, “Because these fungal networks are key entry points of carbon into global soils, we can now explore what triggers fungi to increase carbon flows underground.”

As in human supply chains, the efficiency of mycorrhizal fungal supply-chains depends on the ability of a network to produce and deliver goods to the right place, at the right time, at the lowest possible cost. Dr. Howard Stone, co-author and Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Princeton University adds “Understanding how these fungal networks adjust internal flows and resource trading to build supply chains in response to environment stimuli will be an important direction for future research”

Whether and how designers of human-built supply chains can learn from these principles evolved by plants and fungi over hundreds of millions of years is an exciting frontier. The team is now in the final stages of building a new robot which will increase data collection by a further 10x, allowing them to explore how fungal networks respond to rapid environmental change, including increases in disturbance and rising temperatures.

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See the authors discuss their work in a video, here. Fungal images and flow videos for download here.

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Full paper available: https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/m8t6bh7bw1qb0chh25l18/Travelling-Fungal-Wave-Nature-2025.pdf?rlkey=0gbll8fim8x5ui2qdmjgck4sm&st=ra7o8vzg&dl=0

“A travelling-wave strategy for plant–fungal trade” Nature  https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08614-x

Research funded by the Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP), Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), the Grantham Foundation, the Paul Allen Foundation, and the Schmidt Family Foundation

  

Network of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal network with a muti-nucleate reproductive spore imaged with a fluorescent dye and confocal microscopy. The image, derived from hundreds of z-stacks, uses pseudo-coloration to indicate depth, with blue being closer and red farther from the observer.

Credit

Vasilis Kokkoris - VU Amsterdam/AMOLF/SPUN



During the wave-like expansion of their mycelial networks, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi maintain surprisingly constant transport efficiencies back to roots, while simultaneously adding loops that shorten paths to potential new trade partners.

Credit

Loreto Oyarte Gálvez - VU Amsterdam/AMOLF


 

US Female physicians at elevated risk for suicide




Many physicians struggle with depression and burnout; the consequences, can be tragic


University of California - San Diego




In a new analysis of data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine found that female physicians in the U.S. had a 53% higher suicide risk compared to females in the general population. Physicians were also more likely to experience various risk factors for suicide, such as mental health struggles or legal issues. The findings, published in JAMA Psychiatry, underpin the need for more comprehensive suicide prevention strategies in a population that experiences unique and significant workplace stressors.

“We're seeing slow but steady progress in promoting wellness in the medical profession, but there’s clearly still a long way to go,” said senior study author Sidney Zisook, M.D., a professor of psychiatry at UC San Diego School of Medicine and a psychiatrist at UC San Diego Health. “Many suicides could be prevented if we destigmatize mental health treatment and make it more accessible and feasible for physicians.”

For physicians, mental health struggles like burnout and depression are all-too-common due to the high-stress nature of their profession. Physicians are regularly required to work long hours within complex health systems and are also responsible for making life-or-death decisions. While older research has suggested that physicians may be at higher risk for suicide than the general population, more recent studies have been inconclusive. Recent research is also ambiguous about the role of gender in suicide risk among physicians.

“Our study helps confirm the fact that physicians are at high risk for suicide, and it tells us that we need to be even more vigilant about this when it comes to female physicians,” said first author Hirsh Makhija, M.S., a postgraduate volunteerresearcher in the Department of Psychiatry at UC San Diego School of Medicine. “Existing suicide prevention programs may not be enough.”

The new study, which analyzed data from the National Violent Death Reporting System from 2017 to 2021, helps fill this gap in knowledge. By investigating more than 137,000 suicides across the U.S., the researchers found:

  • While males accounted for 80% of physicians who died by suicide, female physicians had a 53% higher rate of suicide compared to females in the general population.
  • Compared to the general population, physicians of either sex who died by suicide were 35% more likely to experience depressed mood, 66% more likely to experience other mental health issues, more than twice as likely to experience job problems, and 40% more likely to experience legal problems.
  • Physicians were 85% more likely to use poisoning for suicide, and more than four times as likely to use sharp instruments.
  • Physicians were 75% more likely to test positive for benzodiazepines, 32% more likely to test positive for opiates or opioids, 53% more likely to test positive for cardiovascular agents, and almost three times as likely to test positive for drugs not prescribed for home use.

While the study did not seek to determine why female physicians are at higher risk of suicide, the researchers hypothesize that it is due to factors such as under-recognition for their work, inequitable pay and opportunities for promotion, sexual harassment on the job, and often greater domestic responsibilities leading to work-life imbalance.

The findings highlight the need for comprehensive and multimodal strategies for enhancing suicide prevention. Specifically, the study authors recommend limiting access to lethal means, such as medications and sharp instruments and improving mental health resources and support for physicians. They also emphasize the need to continue investigating the root causes of mental health struggles in the health care field as a whole in order to develop new and better approaches to suicide prevention.

“Our work underpins the need for continued efforts to destigmatize mental health care and shift the culture of medicine from one of self-reliance and silent suffering to one of sharing, caring, and connecting,” added Zisook, “Self-care and self-compassion should be part of what it means to be a consummate medical professional.”

Link to full study.

Additional coauthors of the study include Judy E. Davidson at UC San Diego School of Medicine, Kelly C. Lee at UC San Diego Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Arianna Barnes at Barnes Jewish Hospital and Amanda Choflet at Northeastern University.

The study received no external funding.

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A new legal standard for US medical malpractice



JAMA Network


About The Article: In May 2024, the American Law Institute approved its first-ever restatement of the law of medical malpractice, including new standards for resolving malpractice claims. This article describes the new legal standards and their significance for health professionals and organizations in 3 core areas: clinical care, communicating with patients, and the practice environment.

Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Christopher T. Robertson, JD, PhD, email ctr00@bu.edu.

To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/

(doi:10.1001/jama.2025.0097)

Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.

Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This link will be live at the embargo time https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/10.1001/jama.2025.0097?guestAccessKey=ff36523c-4a47-400e-ab08-4ab098d05d37&utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=022625

 

Influencers promoting ‘overwhelmingly’ misleading information about medical tests on social media



University of Sydney





Influencers are promoting “overwhelmingly” misleading information about medical tests on Instagram and TikTok, according to a global University of Sydney-led study published today in JAMA Network Open. 

Researchers analysed almost 1000 posts about five controversial medical screening tests that had been promoted by social media influencers to almost 200 million followers. They found most posts had no reference to scientific evidence, were promotional, had explicit financial interests and failed to mention potential harms. 

The tests included full-body MRI scans; genetic testing claiming to identify early signs of 50 cancers; blood tests for testosterone levels; the anti-mullerian hormone (AMH) test which surveys a woman’s egg count; and the gut microbiome test. Experts say these tests have limited evidence of benefit in healthy people and could lead to overdiagnosis and overuse.  
 
“The vast majority of these posts were overwhelmingly misleading,” said Dr Brooke Nickel, who led the research from the Faculty of Medicine and Health’s School of Public Health.  

“They are being promoted under the guise of early screening, as a way to take control of your own health. The problem is they are unnecessary for most people and, in some cases, the science backing their efficacy is shaky,” Dr Nickel said.  

The study found 85 percent of the posts did not mention any test downsides or risks. “These tests carry the potential for healthy people to receive unnecessary diagnoses, which could lead to unnecessary medical treatments or impact mental health,” Dr Nickel said.  

“One example is the ‘egg timer’ or AMH test. It is being heavily marketed to women by influencers as a way of measuring fertility, but experts do not consider it to be reliable. There is the concern that a low result discovered outside the context of a specific medical issue may drive some women to unnecessary, costly fertility interventions,” she said. 

“Another example is the testosterone test, often marketed to men using fearmongering tactics to then promote testosterone supplements which claim to enhance masculinity and sexual performance. This is risky as the long-term safety of testosterone replacement therapy on cardiovascular health and mortality is still unknown. 

“One of the underlying themes being used by influencers promoting these tests is that knowledge is power, but most information is cherry picked. When it comes to health, getting the full picture is so important, and half-truths are often lies.” 

Among the 982 posts on Instagram and TikTok: 

  • 87 percent mentioned benefits of the tests, yet only 15 percent mentioned potential harms; 

  • Only 6 percent mentioned the risk of overdiagnosis or overtreatment; 

  • Only 6 percent mentioned scientific evidence, while 34 percent used personal anecdotes to promote the test; 

  • 68 percent of influencers and other account holders had financial interests in promoting the test (e.g. partnership, collaboration, sponsorship or selling for own profit in some way). 

Co-researcher Dr Ray Moynihan, an Honorary Assistant Professor at Bond University, said: “These findings suggest social media is an open sewer of medical misinformation.  

“This is a public health crisis that exacerbates overdiagnosis and threatens the sustainability of health systems.”  

A detailed analysis of the results found that posts from medical doctors, posts mentioning scientific evidence, and posts from influencers with no financial interest in the tests, tended to be more balanced overall.  

The research group is currently investigating ways to better regulate this type of misleading medical information on social media. 

“Given that social media platforms like Instagram are moving away from fact-checking their content, the need for stronger regulation to prevent misleading medical information has gained urgency,” said Dr Josh Zadro, senior researcher and co-author from the University of Sydney. 
 
5 common controversial tests in Instagram and TikTok posts  

Test 

Benefits and Harms  

Full-body MRI scan 

Claimed to test for up to 500 conditions, yet no evidence of benefit for healthy people, while real dangers exist of unnecessary diagnoses and overtreatment. 

Multi-cancer early detection tests 

Claimed to screen for more than 50 cancers, yet clinical trials are still under way. As yet, there is no evidence that benefits of screening healthy populations will outweigh harms of unnecessary cancer diagnoses. 

AMH or “egg-timer” test  

While beneficial for certain women, this test is falsely promoted to healthy women as a test for fertility, with concerns results can lead to unnecessary, costly fertility treatments. 

Gut microbiome test 

Test promises “wellness” via early detection of many conditions – from flatulence to depression – without good evidence of benefit, alongside concerns that test results could lead to medical overuse, causing harm and waste. 

Testosterone test  

No evidence of benefit for testing healthy men, yet danger of overuse of treatments; long-term safety of testosterone therapy, in relation to adverse cardiovascular events and early death, has not yet been established. 


Declaration

Brooke Nickel and Emma Grundtvig Gram are current members of the International Scientific Committee of Preventing Overdiagnosis. Brooke Nickel, Tessa Copp and Joshua Zadro are funded through an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Emerging Leader Research Fellowship (1194108, 2009419, and 1194105).The funders had no role in the design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data; preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript; and decision to submit the manuscript for publication.