Tuesday, May 05, 2026

 

Phage’s deep pockets


Weizmann Institute researchers have identified three new families of proteins that viruses use to disrupt bacterial immune signaling




Weizmann Institute of Science




The genomes of phages – viruses that infect bacteria – are largely composed of “dark matter”: genes that encode proteins whose functions remain unknown. Less than four years ago, a team led by Prof. Rotem Sorek at the Weizmann Institute of Science identified a new type of protein within this viral dark matter and dubbed it a “sponge.” Viral sponge proteins are porous and specialize in trapping molecules within deep pockets – much like a sponge that absorbs water. For phages, however, this sponge serves as a weapon: It traps communication molecules that are essential to bacterial immune systems, allowing the phage to take control of the bacterium and multiply inside it unhindered.

Until recently, very few sponge proteins had been found. Their genetic sequences differ greatly from one another, making them difficult to detect. Now, using an innovative research approach that combines artificial intelligence with experimental biology, researchers in Sorek’s lab have uncovered new families of sponge proteins that disrupt immune communication in bacteria. The findings, published in Science, reveal how viruses silence the immune system’s alarm signals, and shed light on the importance of communication disruption in the billion-year-long war between viruses and bacteria.

In the new study, the researchers examined the structures of sponge proteins identified so far and noticed a recurring architectural pattern that could be used to discover new proteins of this type. “They are all small, composed of several identical subunits and contain deep pockets,” explains Sorek. “These pockets carry a positive electrical charge, allowing them to absorb immune alarm molecules, which are typically negatively charged.”

Insights like these used to have limited practical value, but the AI revolution has changed that. “We realized that with advanced AI tools such as Google’s AlphaFold, we could scan an enormous number of proteins and search for those with positively charged pockets capable of trapping immune molecules,” says Dr. Nitzan Tal, who led the new study in Sorek’s lab. “This allowed us to reveal new functions of phage proteins based solely on their structure.”

The scientists scanned a database of 32 million genes encoding phage proteins, from 2 million phage genomes, and used AlphaFold to predict their three-dimensional structures. “We found more than 120 candidates whose structures matched our criteria, and moved on to experimental testing,” says Tal.

The researchers then tested the effectiveness of each candidate against five bacterial immune systems, using a new method developed by research student Jeremy Garb in Sorek’s lab. The approach enabled the team to perform all the tests simultaneously rather than conducting hundreds of separate experiments. These experiments revealed a new family of sponge proteins that the researchers named Lockin. The AI model predicted that these proteins should consist of six identical subunits arranged in a circular structure resembling flower petals. In collaboration with Prof. Philip J. Kranzusch’s team at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, the researchers determined the structure of one family member using X-ray crystallography, confirming the prediction and deciphering exactly how the immune alarm molecule is captured.

“The huge database of viral proteins we analyzed was mostly obtained from sequencing environmental DNA samples that include a large mixture of phages,” says Sorek. “This allowed us to discover the Lockin proteins, which appeared in hundreds of phages that have never been isolated in the lab.”

Along with AI-based predictions, the researchers used additional innovative strategies. “Romi Hadary, another research student in my lab, noticed that genes that encoded known sponge proteins tend to be fused together in phage genomes,” explains Sorek. “This insight allowed us to identify an additional family of sponge proteins, called Sequestin, based on the fact that their genes are fused to those of known sponges. It goes to show that, even in the age of artificial intelligence, there is still great value in the keen observations of human scientists.”

Yet another protein family discovered in the study, called Acb5, initially puzzled the researchers. “These proteins were very similar to sponge proteins, but we discovered that they not only trap alarm molecules – they also cut them,” says Tal. “This was surprising because they didn’t have the structural features typical of molecular cutting tools. This discovery shows how systematic structural scanning can overturn previous scientific assumptions.”

The protein families identified in this study appear in the genomes of thousands of different phages in nature. The researchers also found that a single phage can carry a broad arsenal of sponges and enzymes that neutralize immune alarm molecules. Together, these findings show that proteins disrupting immune communication give phages a significant advantage in their arms race with bacteria.

“It’s not yet known whether viruses that infect plants, animals and humans also use sponge proteins, but the computational and experimental approach we developed makes it possible to test this,” adds Sorek. “If they do, sponge proteins could become targets for the development of antiviral therapies in the future. Our discovery method doesn’t require prior knowledge of protein function, and it doesn’t rely on spotting similarities in genetic sequences or on growing viruses in the lab. It is therefore a powerful tool for uncovering additional immune-related proteins that share structural patterns.”

Also participating in the study were: Dr. Ilya Osterman, Dr. Gil Amitai, Erez Yirmiya, Dr. Nathalie Béchon, Dr. Dina Hochhauser and Barak Madhala from Weizmann’s Molecular Genetics Department; Renee B. Chang and Miguel López Rivera from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA; Roy Jacobson from Weizmann’s Plant and Environmental Sciences Department; Dr. Moshe Goldsmith from Weizmann’s Biomolecular Sciences Department; and Dr. Tanita Wein from Weizmann’s Systems Immunology Department.

Prof. Rotem Sorek’s research is supported by Magnus Konow in honor of his mother Olga Konow Rappaport.

Singapore researchers advance phage therapy in fight against antimicrobial resistance


New study identifies how Mycobacterium abscessus evades treatment and proposes a strategy to overcome resistance




Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), Singapore

Bacteriophages attaching to a bacteria cell 

image: 

Findings from A*STAR IDL, NTU Singapore, and NUS provide actionable design principles for more durable phage cocktails, supporting global efforts to develop new countermeasures against drug-resistant infections.

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Credit: 123RF





SINGAPORE – Scientists from A*STAR Infectious Diseases Labs (A*STAR IDL), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore’s Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine), the National University of Singapore (NUS), and international collaborators have uncovered how Mycobacterium abscessus – a bacterium that causes serious lung infections – can evade bacteriophage (phage) therapy, and demonstrated a combination strategy to overcome this resistance, offering a pathway towards more effective and durable treatments. The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an escalating health challenge that is expected to place growing strain on healthcare systems worldwide. As AMR continues to erode the effectiveness of existing antibiotics – with one in six bacterial infections worldwide now resistant to antibiotics – scientists are accelerating efforts to develop new countermeasures such as phage therapy, which uses viruses to target bacteria. These efforts are important for strengthening global health and infectious disease preparedness.

Understanding How Bacteria Adapt to Survive Treatment

M. abscessus infections are challenging to treat due to their intrinsic resistance to many antibiotics and are increasingly recognised as a significant public health threat.

The researchers found that “smooth” strains of M. abscessus, which are more commonly observed in Asia, respond to phage therapy by switching to a “rough” form, both in the laboratory and pre-clinical models. This transition is linked to mutations in genes responsible for producing glycopeptidolipids, which shape the bacteria’s outer surface.

In other cases, the bacteria resisted phage attack without changing form, instead developing mutations in different surface‑related genes, revealing multiple pathways to resistance.

The team uncovered this resistance mechanism while generating phage‑resistant bacterial mutants to investigate phage‑bacteria interactions.

“These findings reveal an important challenge in developing phage‑based therapies. Although phages can effectively eliminate bacteria, they may also inadvertently make infections more difficult to treat, as seen in the ‘rough’ form,” explained Professor Pablo Bifani, senior author and scientist at LKCMedicine.

Designing More Effective Phage Treatments to Treat AMR Infections

To address this, the team developed a combination therapy targeting both the original “smooth” bacteria and the emerging “rough” variants. This two‑pronged approach proved more effective than a single-phage treatment, pointing toward more robust and longer‑lasting phage therapies for patients.

“What started as a straightforward goal: finding phages that can target M. abscessus smooth strains, led us to the discovery of a clinically relevant resistance mechanism,” said Dr Liew Jun Hao, first author and scientist at A*STAR IDL.

“Phage therapy holds great promise as an alternative treatment for AMR infections, and our findings show that how these treatments are designed is critical. By identifying these ‘escape states’, our study underscores the need for the field to systematically account for bacterial adaptation, so that strategies to counter phage resistance can be built into therapies from the outset, as the threat of AMR continues to grow.”

Associate Professor Albert Yick Hou Lim, Senior Consultant in Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Tan Tock Seng Hospital, who was not part of the study team, said: “In clinical settings, infections caused by M. abscessus are challenging to treat due to limited effective therapeutic options. These findings highlight the importance of anticipating how bacteria may respond to treatment. Strategies that account for such adaptive responses, including combination phage therapies, may enhance treatment durability, improve patient outcomes, and better inform clinical management of these complex infections.”

Advancing Novel Therapeutics and Diagnostics Against AMR

By revealing how phage resistance happens, and how it can be mitigated, this study strengthens the ongoing efforts to develop novel therapeutics against AMR.

The findings may also inform future diagnostic and monitoring approaches, such as tracking bacterial form changes and resistance-associated mutations. This could help clinicians tailor treatments and adjust therapeutic strategies more responsively.

Beyond immediate clinical applications, understanding how bacteria evolve under therapeutic pressure is important for infectious disease preparedness. Such insights can inform the design of new therapies that remain effective even as pathogens adapt.

The study contributes to Singapore’s efforts to strengthen capabilities in infectious diseases research and develop solutions to address emerging global health challenges.

– END –

Enclosed:

ANNEX A – Notes to Editor on Research Findings


______________________________________________________________________

About the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR)

The Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) is Singapore's lead public sector R&D agency. Through open innovation, we collaborate with our partners in both the public and private sectors to benefit the economy and society. As a Science and Technology Organisation, A*STAR bridges the gap between academia and industry. Our research creates economic growth and jobs for Singapore, and enhances lives by improving societal outcomes in healthcare, urban living, and sustainability. A*STAR plays a key role in nurturing scientific talent and leaders for the wider research community and industry. A*STAR’s R&D activities span biomedical sciences to physical sciences and engineering, with research entities primarily located in Biopolis and Fusionopolis. For ongoing news, visit www.a-star.edu.sg.

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About A*STAR Infectious Diseases Labs (A*STAR IDL)

A*STAR Infectious Diseases Labs (A*STAR IDL) was established in April 2021 with a mission to be a leading research institute of infectious diseases in antimicrobial resistance, respiratory and vector-borne diseases. A*STAR IDL brings together infectious diseases expertise from across multiple disciplines to drive cutting edge translational infectious diseases research to contribute to Singapore’s national preparedness and defence against the threat of emerging infections. Building upon a robust foundation of our strong biomedical research capabilities and complemented by our globally connected scientific network, A*STAR IDL aims to focus on innovative technologies in infectious disease detection, intervention and prevention with a pathway to impact on health and economic outcomes. https://www.a-star.edu.sg/idlabs

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Novel wheat hybrids increase resistance to major fungal disease by up to 70%




Society for Experimental Biology





A new experimental study has identified a novel genetic locus in a common agricultural weed, Elymus repens, that provides significant resistance to the destructive fungal disease Fusarium Head Blight (FHB) and has now been successfully transferred into wheat to produce FHB resistant hybrids.

FHB is a virulent fungal disease that poses a serious threat to global food security and is regarded as one of the world’s most economically harmful cereal diseases. FHB reduces grain yield and produces mycotoxins that cause gastrointestinal issues in humans and livestock, requiring infected crops to be destroyed.

E. repens, more widely known as coach grass or common coach, is a wild relative of cultivated wheat, allowing for the two species to breed together and create genetic hybrids.

“Both research and breeding practice have shown that developing and deploying resistant wheat cultivars is the fundamental solution to FHB,” says study author, Fei Wang. “However, current efforts are limited by a scarcity of major resistance sources, narrow genetic backgrounds and inefficient use of resistance genes.”

Dr Yinghui Li and Houyang Kang's research team’s new study, published in the Journal of Experimental Botany, outlines how they successfully hybridised E. repens and cultivated wheat to transfer FHB-resistant genes from E. repens into the wheat.

When testing for the presence of FHB from deliberately infected plants, hybrid genotypes containing the resistance genes, labelled as 1StL, showed a 69% reduction in diseased plant spikelets under greenhouse conditions compared to the control wheat, and a 60% reduction under field conditions.

The researchers found no presence of genetic markers from previously identified alien FHB resistance genes in the hybrids, indicating that 1StL carries a novel resistance locus, which the team has named Fhb.Er‑1StL.

Notably, this is the third resistance locus that Dr Yinghui Li and Houyang Kang group has identified from Elymus repens, following their earlier discoveries of QFhb.Er‑7StL and Fhb.Er‑3StS. The new locus represents an additional, valuable source of resistance that can now be used in wheat breeding.

“We believe this work is of practical importance for accelerating the breeding of resistant, high-yielding wheat varieties and breaking the bottleneck in FHB resistance breeding,” says Dr Yinghui Li.

This study was conducted by researchers from State Key Laboratory of Crop Gene Exploration and Utilization in Southwest China, Sichuan and Agricultural University, Chengdu, China.

The Journal of Experimental Botany is a partially open access journal published on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology by Oxford University Press. The aim of the Journal of Experimental Botany is to publish papers that advance our understanding of plant biology.

Scientists unlock new way to engineer next generation glass



University of Birmingham



Scientists have adapted a centuries-old principle of chemistry to fine-tune a new type of glass made from metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) - metal atoms connected by organic molecules - that efficiently trap gases like CO₂ and hydrogen and even capture water.

Publishing their findings today (4 May) in Nature Chemistry, an international research team, including scientists from TU Dortmund and the University of Birmingham, reveals that MOF glasses can be tuned and engineered in the same way as traditional glasses.

Researchers discovered that adding small chemical compounds containing sodium or lithium to the glass changes its behaviour and structure. The chemicals lower the temperature at which the glass softens and change how easily it flows when heated, which makes manufacturing easier.

The discovery provides a new design framework for making customised MOF glasses for advanced technological applications. The process could unlock new possibilities for high performance materials used in gas separation, chemical storage, and advanced coatings.

Dr Dominik Kubicki, from the University of Birmingham, said: “Glass has been part of human civilisation for millennia. From ancient Mesopotamia to modern fibre-optic cables, small amounts of chemical modifiers make it easier to process glass and change its functional properties.

“However, MOF glasses soften only at high temperatures - above 300 °C - close to their degradation temperature, making manufacturing challenging and limiting broader use. This discovery unlocks new possibilities for future high-performance materials.”

One of the best-known examples of MOF glass is ZIF-62, a porous material that can be melted and cooled into a glass while retaining part of its internal porosity; which makes it attractive for applications in gas separation, membranes and catalysis.

Professor Sebastian Henke, from TU Dortmund University, said: “Our approach is inspired by how conventional silicate glasses have been modified: disrupting the network structure to tune melting behaviour and mechanical properties.

“Our study shows the same principle can be transferred to hybrid metal-organic glasses. This advance brings MOF glasses a step closer to real-world manufacturing and applications in gas separation, storage, catalysis and beyond.”

Understanding how the sodium additives alter the internal structure of the glass required advanced characterisation techniques. University of Birmingham researchers - led by Drs Dominik Kubicki and Benjamin Gallant - contributed essential atomic-level analysis of the modified glass structure, as well as performing high-temperature solid-state Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy experiments at the UK High-Field Solid-State NMR Facility.

This work allowed the team to understand precisely how sodium ions integrate into the glass network and how they disrupt its connectivity.

Birmingham researchers, led by Professor Andrew Morris and Dr Mario Ongkiko, used AI-driven computational modelling to interpret complex NMR data. Using machine-learning-assisted simulations revealed how sodium interacted with the glass structure - a critical validation of the experimental observations.

The experimental and computational insights revealed that sodium does not just fill empty spaces, but takes the place of some zinc atoms, which gently loosens the structure.

Now that it is known how to tweak these glasses in powerful ways, the study recommends that more research is required to learn how to make the materials more stable, predict their behaviour better, and test how useful they are in real‑world technologies.

ENDS

For more information, please contact the Press Office on +44 (0) 121 414 2772 or pressoffice@contacts.bham.ac.uk

‘Alkali-Ion-Modified Zeolitic Imidazolate Framework Glasses’ - Pascal Kolodzeiski, Benjamin Gallant, Lennard Richter, Mario Antonio Ongkiko, Carlo Franke, Aleksander Kostka, Wen-Long Xue, Chinmoy Das, Jan-Benedikt Weiß, Elena Kolodzeiski, Thomas Kress, Gregor Kieslich, Tong Li, Andrew Morris, Dominik Kubicki, Sebastian Henke is published in Nature Chemistry.

Notes for editors:

As well as being ranked among the world’s top 100 institutions, the University of Birmingham is the most targeted UK university by top graduate employers. Its work brings people from across the world to Birmingham, including researchers, educators and more than 40,000 students from over 150 countries.

Participating institutions: Technische Universität Dortmund, University of Birmingham, Ruhr-University Bochum, SRM University-AP, Technical University of Munich, and University of Cambridge.

 

 

 

 

Economic insecurity linked with frailty in later life, study finds



Older people who experience unstable finances, poor housing and fuel poverty are at increased risk of more rapid physical and mental decline as they age, a study suggests


University of Edinburgh






Older people who experience unstable finances, poor housing and fuel poverty are at increased risk of more rapid physical and mental decline as they age, a study suggests.

Research following more than 15,000 people in England has found that living in precarious social or financial circumstances is a key predictor of frailty in later life.

Researchers at the University of Edinburgh, Harvard Medical School and the University of Strathclyde made the discovery using data from men and women aged over 50 taking part in a long-term study of ageing.

The research received funding from the National Institute for Health and Care Research and the Medical Research Council.

The team analysed information on individuals’ finances, employment, pensions, housing, caregiving and relationships collected over a 14-year period as part of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing.

They used this data to develop a Later Life Precarity Index to assess the social risks that can lead to frailty in older adults.

The team then combined this with data on each adult’s cognitive and physical health, ability in carrying out everyday activities, chronic conditions, and psychological and general health to measure their frailty over time.

Findings from the study suggest people living in socially vulnerable conditions are at greater risk of developing frailty, in some cases this might be decades earlier, than those with more stable circumstances, and can go on to accumulate higher levels of frailty as they age, the researchers say

As well as low income and limited wealth, factors such as renting in later life, food insecurity, fuel poverty, homelessness, and poor housing quality were identified as having substantial impacts on frailty risk.

This was the case even after accounting for a range of factors, including age, sex, and overall financial circumstances.

In terms of relationship status, being widowed or living alone was associated with small increases in frailty risk, while being divorced showed no significant effect.

While the study cannot prove that social inequalities directly cause frailty it provides robust evidence that exposure to multiple forms of social precarity is likely a driver of frailty in later life.

The study is among the first to capture the cumulative impact of precarious circumstances across multiple areas of life in older adults.

Researchers say the findings build on their previous research that showed increases in frailty during a period of austerity policies which involved cuts to social services supporting older adults.  

Laurence Rowley-Abel, of the University of Edinburgh’s School of Social and Political Science, said: “This research demonstrates the substantial health impacts of the precarious social circumstances that many face as they age. We know from our previous research that frailty levels worsened during a period of austerity policies, and this study starts to show us why. In terms of social policy, the research suggests that cuts to social support and services for older people may bring unanticipated costs by driving greater exposure to social precarity in later life which may impede healthy ageing and the capacity for independent living.”

The research was carried out within the Social Policy subject area at the University of Edinburgh as part of the work of the Advanced Care Research Centre, funded by Legal & General.

The study is published in Ageing and Society

 

 

Multi-pronged plan to address childhood obesity crisis





Murdoch Childrens Research Institute






Heart health, diet, exercise and sleep will be targeted under a multi-pronged strategy by child health experts to address Australia’s obesity crisis. 

GenHEART, spearheaded by Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI), is a coordinated plan over 10 years to improve long-term wellbeing and reverse alarming obesity trends among children and their parents.

Health experts across cardiometabolic health, sleep, obesity, nutrition, physical activity, behavioural science and health economics from Victoria, Western Australia, NSW and Tasmania have come together under the bold vision.

With funding, the multifaceted intervention, initially involving four trials, will start in 2027. The trials will draw on data and participants from Generation Australia, which brings together two of the largest, most detailed projects of their kind – Generation Victoria (GenV), involving 50,000 children, and ORIGINS, which follows 10,000 children and their families in Western Australia. 

MCRI Professor Melissa Wake, who will help oversee Generation Australia, said GenHEART was a once in a generation opportunity to finally the shift the dial on rising obesity rates.

In Australia, cardiovascular diseases affect one in 15 people. Cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney conditions cost over $23 billion each year in healthcare spending.

“Good heart health in childhood is crucial to reducing the risk of chronic disease across a person’s lifetime,” Professor Wake said.

“We know the risk factors underlying cardiometabolic diseases such as unhealthy weight gain, high blood pressure, low physical activity and poor sleep often begin in the primary school years.

“These early warning signs predict the likelihood of heart attacks, stroke, type 2 diabetes and kidney disease in adulthood and are also key drivers of dementia, cancer and poor mental health.

“Sadly, once established, these patterns are hard to reverse. Prevention programs have failed to make a difference largely due to either being too small, short-term or narrowly focussed. But GenHEART is designed to address all these issues, simultaneously, via a suite of coordinated prevention trials at whole population scale, using Generation Australia’s reach and infrastructure.”

The four trials, each answering a key prevention question, include:

GenSLEEP. Can bringing a child’s bedtime forward by 30 minutes reduce unhealthy weight gain and improve mental health?

GenWEIGHT. Can weight loss drugs for parents with obesity reshape a household’s food habits, helping to break intergenerational cycles of obesity?

GenPRESSURE. Can blood pressure checks at primary school reduce the risk of stroke and heart disease?

GenMOVE. Can changing school physical activities to focus on strength and lean-mass development lead to better heart health?

Research led by MCRI in 2025 found that half of children and adolescents in Australia are forecast to be overweight or obese by 2050. But it noted with significant increases predicated within the next five years, urgent action now could turn the tide on the public health crisis. 

Megan, a mum of three, has her youngest son, Teddy, 2, enrolled in GenV. She said as a nurse she understood the importance of comprehensive and interlinked data to help researchers explore the best clinical practices.

“Having two of my three children with food allergies, I know how vital research is towards making a difference and improving treatments,” she said. “If we can also instill healthy habits in our children early, the benefits will stay with them for a lifetime.”

The Generation Australia cohort will be progressively invited to take part in GenHEART as their child enters primary school.

“The four trials will be carefully sequenced across childhood,” Professor Wake said. “This approach allows interventions to be introduced at developmentally appropriate stages, while insights from earlier trials inform those that follow.

“Children and families may be assigned to receive one or more interventions or to continue with usual health advice. This will enable researchers to determine which approaches are most effective and at what stages of development.

“While all interventions are designed to be scalable and feasible at a population level, they extend beyond child-focused programs. Some target parents, others focus on family routines and environments, and some involve screening and broader health system responses. This approach reflects the many factors that shape lifelong heart health.”

GenHEART research partners include The Kids Research Institute Australia in Perth, UNSW Sydney, University of Melbourne, Edith Cowan University in Perth, Deakin University, University of Tasmania, Monash University and the George Institute for Global Health in Sydney.

*The content of this communication is the sole responsibility of MCRI and does not reflect the views of the NHMRC.

Available for interview:

Professor Melissa Wake, MCRI Group Leader, Prevention Innovation 

Associate Professor Jonathan Mynard, MCRI Team Leader, Heart

Megan, whose son Teddy, 2, is enrolled in GenV

Emalka, whose son Shahan, 3, is enrolled in GenV