Wednesday, March 26, 2025

 

UNM researchers find live hantavirus is carried in more than 30 New Mexico small mammal species




University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center




Ever since 1993, when a deadly disease outbreak in the Four Corners first revealed the presence of hantavirus in North America, New Mexicans have been warned to be on the lookout for deer mice, which harbor the microbe and can spread it through their droppings.

A few human cases, usually presenting with severe cardiopulmonary symptoms, typically occur in New Mexico each year – almost all in the northwestern quadrant of the state – and even with advanced treatment about 35 percent of patients die.

But now, University of New Mexico researchers have found that more than 30 species of rodent and other small mammals endemic to the Southwest actually carry the virus, including ground squirrels, chipmunks, gophers, rats and even house mice.

In a study published in PLOS Pathogens, a team led by Steven Bradfute, PhD, an associate professor in the Center for Global Health within the UNM School of Medicine’s Department of Internal Medicine, reported that genomic material from the sin nombre virus – the prevalent hantavirus strain in the U.S. – was present in about a quarter of the more than 1,500 small mammals collected throughout New Mexico between 2019 and 2023.

The most likely way people get infected is when they breathe in aerosolized droppings excreted by the animals, he said. To determine whether species other than deer mice might spread the disease, the team was able to isolate live hantavirus from their salivary glands and lung tissue.

“There's a lot of deer mice, and they carry the virus, but there's a lot of other rodents that also carry the virus and they can shed live virus,” Bradfute said. “So, they’re very much potential vectors as well.”

One puzzle yet to be solved, he said, is why the reported human hantavirus cases in New Mexico remain concentrated in the Four Corners region, even though mammals elsewhere in the state have now been shown to carry the live virus.

“One possibility is the genetic sequence of the virus is different in the northwest, versus the southeast,” Bradfute said. ‘We are in the middle of testing that, although the hantaviruses are notoriously difficult to sequence. Our preliminary results don’t suggest there’s a huge difference between the different regions, but we still need to wait for the full sequence to be completed.”

Another possibility is that there are cases in southeastern New Mexico, but they're just not being recognized, he said. “We are looking at that question by looking at antibodies in humans from different regions. We've just started a project with that, but we don't have the data yet.”

In addition, there could be something about the viral transmission from rodents to humans that is more efficient in northwestern New Mexico than in the southeast, Bradfute said.

“That could be due to how well the particles are aerosolized and how stable the virus is. I think that's plausible because it is geographically quite different in those two areas.”

It could also be the case that rodents simply carry higher levels of the virus in the northwest versus the southeast, he said. “We’ve started looking at that, and what we do see is in the regions where there are recorded cases, there are some animals that have really high viral loads.”

Hantavirus drew international headlines recently when it was determined to have caused the death of Betsy Arakawa, wife of actor Gene Hackman, in their Santa Fe home. The tragedy underscores the need to take precautions when entering enclosed or unventilated spaces, especially in the spring and summer months as small mammals multiply, Bradfute said.

“The incubation period from the time you get exposed to the time you have symptoms is typically at least one or two weeks and could be as long as eight weeks,” he said. Early symptoms mimic the flu or COVID, but after a few days, it’s not uncommon to develop severe shortness of breath and extreme exhaustion. “That’s when you’re in a danger zone,” Bradfute said.

In the absence of any effective antiviral drugs, medical treatment mainly consists of trying to manage disease symptoms, he said. Sicker patients are often placed on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) machines that take over from the heart and lungs to give the body time to fight off the infection. Bradfute and his colleagues are part of an effort to develop monoclonal antibody treatments, which so far have proved to be protective in animal models.

For now, the best strategy is to avoid becoming infected in the first place, he said. People who come across rodent droppings should wear a well-fitting N95 or KN-95 mask and gloves and spray the droppings with a 10% bleach solution while thoroughly ventilating the affected area. “When you clean up, you should use paper towels and don’t do things that generate aerosols, like sweeping or using a vacuum.”

The good news is that, unlike SARS-CoV-2, the sin nombre hantavirus is not spread from person to person, and it doesn’t survive long in open air or when exposed to sunlight.

“What I try to tell people is it’s good to be careful, but don’t worry too much about things,” Bradfute said. “Take precautions when you can, but fortunately, the transmission as of now is pretty rare.”

 

Ocean eddies – the food trucks of the sea


Study reveals for the first time the lipidome composition of mesoscale eddies and their precise role in nutrient transport and the carbon cycle




Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel (GEOMAR)






Mesoscale eddies, oceanic swirling currents with typical horizontal scales of 10-100 kilometres in diameter, are ubiquitous features of the global ocean and play a vital role in marine ecosystems. Eddies, which form in biologically productive coastal upwelling regions, are important vehicles for the transport of carbon and nutrients. These eddies trap water masses and migrate into the open ocean, where productivity is comparatively low. As such, they have a significant influence on the nutrient and carbon cycles within the ocean. 

For decades, marine scientists have sought to understand in detail how coastal waters are transported offshore and how this process affects productivity in the open ocean, especially as eddy activity is expected to change significantly due to climate change. 

While it was previously known that ocean eddies transport large quantities of organic carbon and nutrients, the exact composition and nutritional quality of this material for zooplankton and fish has remained largely unexplored. Using high-resolution mass spectrometry, a team of researchers from GEOMAR and MARUM has now analysed the lipidome – the entire spectrum of lipid molecules including essential fats – in and around an ocean eddy. The results of their work have been published in the journal Communications Earth and Environment

Cutting-edge analysis reveals lipid diversity in eddies 

“These eddies are basically the food trucks of the ocean,” explains Dr Kevin Becker, geochemist at GEOMAR and lead author of the study. “They transport nutrients from the highly productive coastal upwelling regions to the open ocean, where these nutrients are released and are likely to influence biological productivity.”

For their study, the researchers analysed samples collected during the GEOMAR-coordinated REEBUS project (Role of Eddies in the Carbon Pump of Eastern Boundary Upwelling Systems) on the METEOR M156 Expedition off the coast of Mauritania (West Africa). Almost 1,000 different lipids were identified. Lipids can make up to 20 percent of the carbon content of phytoplankton and are essential building blocks of cells, performing critical biological functions as energy stores, membrane components, signalling molecules, and electron transporters. 

“Lipids also contain chemotaxonomic information that allows us to determine the composition of microbial communities,” adds Dr Becker. “Based on their chemical signatures, we can distinguish, for example, between lipids from phytoplankton, bacteria, and archaea species.” 

The results of the study showed that the lipid signature within the mesoscale eddy was significantly different from that of the surrounding waters, indicating a distinct microbial community. In particular, energy-rich storage lipids and essential fatty acids were enriched – nutrients that higher marine organisms such as zooplankton and fish cannot synthesise on their own and must ingest through food. 

Calculations show that coastal eddies in the upwelling region off Mauritania transport up to 9.7 ± 2.0 gigagrams (about 10,000 tonnes) of labile organic carbon to the open ocean each year. “Our study highlights the central role of mesoscale eddies in the local carbon cycle and provides a basis for future investigations of their importance on a global scale,” concludes Prof. Dr Anja Engel, lead scientist of the study and head of the Marine Biogeochemistry Research Division at GEOMAR. 

 

York University research sheds light on earliest days of Earth’s formation



Faculty of Science prof used novel approach of applying fluid dynamics and chemistry to planetary sciences for modelling study published in Nature




York University





Wednesday March 26, TORONTO – New research led by a York University professor sheds light on the earliest days of the earth’s formation and potentially calls into question some earlier assumptions in planetary science about the early years of rocky planets. Establishing a direct link between the Earth’s interior dynamics occurring within the first 100 million years of its history and its present-day structure, the work is one of the first in the field to combine fluid mechanics with chemistry to better understand the Earth's early evolution.  

“This study is the first to demonstrate, using a physical model, that the first-order features of Earth’s lower mantle structure were established four billion years ago, very soon after the planet came into existence,” says lead author Faculty of Science Assistant Professor Charles-Édouard Boukaré in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at York. 

The mantle is the rocky envelopment that surrounds the iron core of rocky planets. The structure and dynamics of the Earth’s lower mantle play a major role throughout Earth’s history as it dictates, among others, the cooling of the Earth’s core where the Earth’s magnetic field is generated. 

Boukaré originally from France, worked with research colleagues from Paris on the paper, Solidification of Earth’s mantle led inevitably to a basal magma ocean, published today in Nature

Boukaré says that while seismology, geodynamics, and petrology have helped answer many questions about the present-day thermochemical structure of Earth’s interior, a key question remained: how old are these structures, and how did they form? Trying to answer this, he says, is much like looking at a person in the form of an adult versus a child and understanding how the energetic conditions will not be the same. 

“If you take kids, sometimes they do crazy things because they have a lot of energy, like planets when they are young. When we get older, we don't do as many crazy things, because our activity or level of energy decreases. So, the dynamic is really different, but there are some things that we do when we are really young that might affect our entire life,” he says “It’s the same thing for planets. There are some aspects of the very early evolution of planets that we can actually see in their structure today.” 

To better understand old planets, we must first learn how young planets behave.

Since simulations of the Earth’s mantle focus mostly on present-day solid-state conditions, Boukaré had to develop a novel model to explore the early days of Earth when the mantle was much hotter and substantially molten, work that he has been doing since his PhD. 

Boukaré’s model is based on a multiphase flow approach that allows for capturing the dynamics of magma solidification at a planetary scale. Using his model, he studied how the early mantle transitioned from a molten to a solid state.  Boukaré and his team were surprised to discover that most of the crystals formed at low pressure, which he says creates a very different chemical signature than what would be produced at depth in a high-pressure environment. This challenges the prevailing assumptions in planetary sciences in how rocky planets solidify. 

“Until now, we assumed the geochemistry of the lower mantle was probably governed by high-pressure chemical reactions, and now it seems that we need to account also for their low-pressure counterparts.” 

Boukare says this work could also help predict the behaviour of other planets down the line. 

“If we know some kind of starting conditions, and we know the main processes of planetary evolution, we can predict how planets will evolve.”

Read the online version.

Artist rendering  

Caption: Artistic view of Earth’s interior during mantle solidification in the first hundreds of millions of years of Earth’s history. Gravitational segregation of dense, iron-rich magma (in orange) likely formed a basal magma ocean atop the core, that can explain the present-day structure of the lower mantle.

 

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York University is a modern, multi-campus, urban university located in Toronto, Ontario. Backed by a diverse group of students, faculty, staff, alumni and partners, we bring a uniquely global perspective to help solve societal challenges, drive positive change, and prepare our students for success. York's fully bilingual Glendon Campus is home to Southern Ontario's Centre of Excellence for French Language and Bilingual Postsecondary Education. York’s campuses in Costa Rica and India offer students exceptional transnational learning opportunities and innovative programs. Together, we can make things right for our communities, our planet, and our future. 

 

Media Contact: 

Emina Gamulin, York University Media Relations, egamulin@yorku.ca

 

A cleaner future for tires: Scientists pioneer chemical process to repurpose rubber waste




University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Dr. Aleksandr Zhukhovitskiy 

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In his study, Dr. Aleksandr Zhukhovitskiy, William R. Kenan, Jr. Fellow and assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry at UNC-Chapel Hill, introduces a novel chemical method for breaking down rubber waste.

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Credit: UNC-Chapel Hill Department of Chemistry




Every year, millions of tires end up in landfills, creating an environmental crisis with far-reaching consequences. In the United States alone, over 274 million tires were scrapped in 2021, with nearly a fifth of them being discarded into landfills. The accumulation of these waste materials presents not only a space issue but also introduces environmental hazards, such as chemical leaching and spontaneous combustion. While pyrolysis—a process that chemically recycles rubber through high-temperature decomposition—is widely used, it generates harmful byproducts like benzene and dioxins, posing health and environmental risks.

A U.S. Department of Energy-funded study, “Deconstruction of Rubber via C–H Amination and Aza-Cope Rearrangement,” recently published in Nature and led by Dr. Aleksandr Zhukhovitskiy, William R. Kenan, Jr. Fellow and Assistant Professor in the Department of Chemistry at UNC-Chapel Hill, introduces a novel chemical method for breaking down rubber waste. This pioneering technique utilizes C–H amination and a polymer rearrangement strategy to transform discarded rubber into valuable precursors for epoxy resins, offering an innovative and sustainable alternative to traditional recycling methods.

Rubber, including the synthetic kind used in tires, is composed of polymers cross-linked together into a three-dimensional network that behaves as a tough, flexible material. Recycling these materials is difficult due to the extensive cross-linking within the polymer structure, which gives rubber its durability but also makes it resistant to degradation. Traditional methods for breaking down rubber focus on two main approaches: de-vulcanization, which breaks sulfur cross-links but weakens the polymer’s mechanical properties, and cleavage of the polymer backbones using oxidative or catalytic methods, which often result in complex, low-value byproducts. Neither approach provides an efficient, scalable solution for repurposing rubber waste.

“Our research seeks to overcome these challenges by developing a method that breaks down rubber into functional materials that possess value even as a mixture,” said Dr. Zhukhovitskiy, who is the corresponding author of the study.

The researchers introduce a sulfur diimide reagent that enables the installation of amine groups at specific locations in the polymer chains. This step is crucial because it sets the stage for the subsequent backbone rearrangement. This chemical reaction reorganizes the polymer backbone, breaking down the rubber into soluble amine-functionalized materials that can be used to produce epoxy resins.

The researchers showed that their two-step process works very well. In a test with a model polymer, they broke it down significantly, reducing its molecular weight from 58,100 g/mol to about 400 g/mol. When they applied the method to used rubber, it broke down completely in just six hours, turning it into a soluble material with amine groups that could be used to manufacture broadly useful materials like epoxy resins.

The efficiency of this method is particularly striking when compared to traditional recycling techniques, which often require extreme temperatures or expensive catalysts. The researchers achieved their results under mild conditions (35-50°C, or 95-122°F) in aqueous media, making the process more environmentally friendly and cost-effective.

Epoxy resins are widely used in industries for adhesives, coatings, and composites. They are usually made from petroleum-based chemicals like bisphenol A and curing agents. This research shows that amine-modified poly-dienes, produced using the researchers’ method, can create epoxy materials with strength similar to commercial resins.

“In moments like this I come to appreciate the power of organic synthesis,” said Maxim Ratushnyy, a co-author of the paper and former postdoctoral scholar at UNC-Chapel Hill. “It is fascinating to see the ease with which the developed sequence of simple, yet powerful, organic transformations can take on a stubborn C—C bond and convert polybutadiene and polyisoprene-based rubbers into potentially valuable epoxy resins.”

Beyond its practical applications, this study marks a significant step toward greener recycling technologies. The researchers evaluated the environmental impact of their process using the Environmental Impact Factor (E-factor), a measure of waste generated relative to the product yield.

“E-factor is a simple but powerful metric to compare the impact of a new process to incumbents, but also to highlight process steps that can be improved as we work to transition this process out of the lab and into practice,” said Dr. Geoff Lewis, a research specialist at the University of Michigan’s Center for Sustainable Systems.

While the complete E-factor, which includes solvent use, was high, the simple E-factor, excluding solvents, was much lower, highlighting areas where the process could be further optimized for sustainability. The team is already exploring greener solvent systems and alternative reaction conditions to reduce waste generation.

“Our research represents a paradigm shift in how we approach the problem of rubber waste,” said Sydney Towell, a co-author of the study and Ph.D. candidate at UNC-Chapel Hill. “By harnessing the power of C–H amination and backbone rearrangement, this method provides a new pathway to transforming post-consumer rubber into high-value materials, reducing reliance on landfills and minimizing environmental harm.”

 

Rare disease drug nitisinone makes human blood deadly to mosquitoes


WOULD IT WORK ON VAMPIERS TOO?!



University of Notre Dame

Glow-in-the-dark Mosquito 

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An Anopheles gambiae mosquito that has been fed dye to make her glow.

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Credit: Provided by Lee R. Haines





In the fight against malaria, controlling the mosquito population is crucial. 

Several methods are currently used to reduce mosquito numbers and malaria risk. One of these includes the antiparasitic medication ivermectin. When mosquitoes ingest blood containing ivermectin, it shortens the insect’s lifespan and helps decrease the spread of malaria. 

However, ivermectin has its own issues. Not only is it environmentally toxic, but also, when it is overused to treat people and animals with worm and parasite infections, resistance to ivermectin becomes a concern. 

Now a study in Science Translational Medicine has identified another medication with the potential to suppress mosquito populations to help control malaria. Researchers found when patients take the drug nitisinone, their blood becomes deadly to mosquitoes. 

“One way to stop the spread of diseases transmitted by insects is to make the blood of animals and humans toxic to these blood-feeding insects,” said Lee R. Haines, associate research professor of biological sciences at the University of Notre Dame, honorary fellow at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and co-lead author of the study. “Our findings suggest that using nitisinone could be a promising new complementary tool for controlling insect-borne diseases like malaria.”

Typically, nitisinone is a medication for individuals with rare inherited diseases — such as alkaptonuria and tyrosinemia type 1 — whose bodies struggle to metabolize the amino acid tyrosine. The medication works by blocking the enzyme 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD), preventing the build-up of harmful disease byproducts in the human body. When mosquitoes drink blood that contains nitisinone, the drug also blocks this crucial HPPD enzyme in their bodies. This prevents the mosquitoes from properly digesting the blood, causing them to quickly die. 

The researchers analyzed the nitisinone dosing concentrations needed for killing mosquitoes, and how those results would stack up against ivermectin, the gold standard ectoparasitic drug (medication that specifically targets ectoparasites such as mosquitoes). 

“We thought that if we wanted to go down this route, nitisinone had to perform better than ivermectin,” said Álvaro Acosta Serrano, professor of biological sciences at Notre Dame and co-corresponding author of the study. “Indeed, nitisinone performance was fantastic; it has a much longer half-life in human blood than ivermectin, which means its mosquitocidal activity remains circulating in the human body for much longer. This is critical when applied in the field for safety and economical reasons.”

The research team tested the mosquitocidal effect of nitisinone on female Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes, the primary mosquito species responsible for spreading malaria in many African countries. If these mosquitoes become infected with malaria parasites, they spread the disease when they feast on a human.

To evaluate how the drug affected the mosquitoes when fed fresh human blood containing nitisinone, researchers collaborated with the Robert Gregory National Alkaptonuria Centre at the Royal Liverpool University Hospital. The center was performing nitisinone trials with people diagnosed with alkaptonuria, who then donated their blood for the study. Those taking nitisinone were found to have blood that was deadly to mosquitoes, which Haines describes as having a “hidden superpower.”

The research team collected data on how the drug was metabolized in peoples’ blood, allowing the team to fine-tune their modeling and provide pharmacological validation of nitisinone as a potential mosquito population control strategy. 

Nitisinone was shown to last longer than ivermectin in the human bloodstream, and was able to kill not only mosquitoes of all ages — including the older ones that are most likely to transmit malaria — but also the hardy mosquitoes resistant to traditional insecticides. 

“In the future, it could be advantageous to alternate both nitisinone and ivermectin for mosquito control,” Haines said. “For example, nitisinone could be employed in areas where ivermectin resistance persists or where ivermectin is already heavily used for livestock and humans.”

Next, the research team aims to explore a semi-field trial to determine what nitisinone dosages are best linked to mosquitocidal efficacy in the field. 

“Nitisinone is a versatile compound that can also be used as an insecticide. What’s particularly interesting is that it specifically targets blood-sucking insects, making it an environmentally friendly option,” Acosta Serrano said. 

As an unintended benefit, extending the use of nitisinone as a vector control tool could consequently increase drug production and decrease the price of the medication for patients suffering from rare genetic diseases in the tyrosine metabolism pathway.

The study was funded by the UK Medical Research Council, Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support Fund, the Medical Research Council Doctoral Training Partnership and the University of Glasgow Wellcome Centre for Integrative Parasitology. 

In addition to Acosta-Serrano and Haines, co-authors include Anna Trett (co-first), Jeremy Burrows, Clair Rose, Natalia García, Giancarlo Biagini and Ghaith Aljayyoussi (co-corresponding) from the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine; Dagmara McGuinness, Clément Regnault and Michael Barrett from the University of Glasgow Wellcome Centre for Integrative Parasitology; Didier Leroy and Jeremy Burrows from the Medicines for Malaria Venture; Marcos Sterkel from the Universidad Nacional de La Plata; and Lakshminarayan Ranganath from the Royal Liverpool University Hospital.

This research was primarily conducted by Haines, Trett, Aljayyoussi and Acosta Serrano at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.