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Glucose nanoparticles help CBD cross the blood-brain barrier

Breakthrough in brain medicine: a new way to deliver CBD!

Cannabidiol (CBD) has incredible potential to fight brain inflammation, but it has always faced a major roadblock: it struggles to dissolve and cross the blood-brain barrier. Researchers have just developed an ingenious solution using glucose-coated nanoparticles to get CBD exactly where it needs to go.

Here’s why it’s a game-changer: 🔬 Sneaky Delivery: The glucose coating helps the particles “hitch a ride” on the brain’s natural glucose transporters, successfully smuggling the CBD across the blood-brain barrier. 🎯 Smart Release: Once inside the brain, the nanoparticles target immune cells (microglia) and only release the CBD when they detect the chemical stress of active inflammation. 🐁 Promising Results: In mouse models of Parkinson’s disease and depression, this new delivery method drastically reduced inflammation, protected neurons, and improved behavioral recovery compared to standard CBD.

This targeted approach could be a massive step forward in treating chronic neuroinflammatory diseases! 🧬✨

Studty.


Glucose-coated nanoparticles carry CBD across the blood-brain barrier, trigger release in inflamed tissue, and reduce neuroinflammatory signs in mice.

The Many Faces of Nonthrombotic Pulmonary Artery Embolism

Not all pulmonary emboli are thrombotic. NTPE spans septic, tumor, fat, air, and iatrogenic causes, often mimicking PE but requiring different management. Recognizing key imaging clues + clinical context is critical for timely, lifesaving diagnosis.


Nonthrombotic pulmonary artery embolism (NTPE) involves occlusion of pulmonary arteries by nonthrombotic material, such as septic emboli, tumor cells, fat, air, or foreign substances. NTPE is less common than thrombotic pulmonary embolism (PE) and may be misdiagnosed as PE. Although the clinical manifestation mimics that of PE, NTPE has distinct pathophysiologic mechanisms that necessitate different management. Diagnosis requires a high index of clinical suspicion and knowledge of imaging findings. The authors provide an overview of the various causes of NTPE, including infectious, neoplastic, iatrogenic or exogenous, and miscellaneous entities, and highlight their key imaging findings. Early and accurate diagnosis is essential for appropriate management.

©RSNA, 2026

Physics-based weather models more accurate than AI at predicting extreme weather

Weather forecasting is another aspect of modern life that artificial intelligence is transforming. Models like GraphCast, Pangu-Weather, and Fuxi are already better than traditional physics-based climate models at predicting some daily weather conditions. However, they are far from perfect. A new study published in the journal Science Advances reports that AI often fails to predict record-breaking extreme weather events.

Thanks to our changing climate, extremes such as record heat waves and windstorms are becoming more frequent. Accurate warnings are vital to help protect lives, property, and infrastructure. However, the unprecedented nature of these events poses a problem for AI.

To understand why, scientists pitted leading AI models against HRES (High Resolution Forecast), considered one of the world’s leading physics-based weather prediction systems. They first built a large database of record-breaking heat, cold, and wind events from 2018 and 2020. The researchers then checked the forecasts that HRES and the AI models had already made for those years to see which system got closest to the real-world outcomes.

Electric double layer unlocks molecular switch behind battery and hydrogen reactions

From smartphone charging to hydrogen production, the fundamental principles of energy technology have been revealed. Korean researchers have, for the first time, identified how molecular structures change within the ultra-small space called the “electric double layer.” The study, published in the journal Nature Communications, opens a new path to simultaneously improve efficiency and performance in battery, hydrogen, and carbon-neutral technologies by reducing energy loss and selectively inducing desired reactions.

A research team led by Professor Hyungjun Kim from the Department of Chemistry, in collaboration with Professor Chang Hyuck Choi from POSTECH and Professor Seung-Jae Shin from UNIST, has identified structural phase transitions (phenomena in which the state or arrangement of matter changes) occurring within the electric double layer.

In particular, they revealed at the molecular level the cause of the phenomenon in which the pattern of electrical storage capacity (capacitance) changes from a camel shape to a bell shape depending on electrolyte concentration.

Adverse impact of acute Toxoplasma gondii infection on human spermatozoa

Ultimately, QIML proves that we don’t need a fully fault-tolerant quantum computer to see results. By using quantum processors to learn the complex “rules” of chaos, we can give classical computers the boost they need to make reliable, long-term predictions about the most turbulent environments in the natural world.


Modeling high-dimensional dynamical systems remains one of the most persistent challenges in computational science. Partial differential equations (PDEs) provide the mathematical backbone for describing a wide range of nonlinear, spatiotemporal processes across scientific and engineering domains (13). However, high-dimensional systems are notoriously sensitive to initial conditions and the floating-point numbers used to compute them (47), making it highly challenging to extract stable, predictive models from data. Modern machine learning (ML) techniques often struggle in this regime: While they may fit short-term trajectories, they fail to learn the invariant statistical properties that govern long-term system behavior. These challenges are compounded in high-dimensional settings, where data are highly nonlinear and contain complex multiscale spatiotemporal correlations.

ML has seen transformative success in domains such as large language models (8, 9), computer vision (10, 11), and weather forecasting (1215), and it is increasingly being adopted in scientific disciplines under the umbrella of scientific ML (16). In fluid mechanics, in particular, ML has been used to model complex flow phenomena, including wall modeling (17, 18), subgrid-scale turbulence (19, 20), and direct flow field generation (21, 22). Physics-informed neural networks (23, 24) attempt to inject domain knowledge into the learning process, yet even these models struggle with the long-term stability and generalization issues that high-dimensional dynamical systems demand. To address this, generative models such as generative adversarial networks (25) and operator-learning architectures such as DeepONet (26) and Fourier neural operators (FNO) (27) have been proposed. While neural operators offer discretization invariance and strong representational power for PDE-based systems, they still suffer from error accumulation and prediction divergence over long horizons, particularly in turbulent and other chaotic regimes (28, 29). Recent work, such as DySLIM (30), enhances stability by leveraging invariant statistical measures. However, these methods depend on estimating such measures from trajectory samples, which can be computationally intensive and inaccurate in all forms of chaotic systems, especially in high-dimensional cases. These limitations have prompted exploration into alternative computational paradigms. Quantum machine learning (QML) has emerged as a possible candidate due to its ability to represent and manipulate high-dimensional probability distributions in Hilbert space (31). Quantum circuits can exploit entanglement and interference to express rich, nonlocal statistical dependencies using fewer parameters than their promising counterparts, which makes them well suited for capturing invariant measures in high-dimensional dynamical systems, where long-range correlations and multimodal distributions frequently arise (32). QML and quantum-inspired ML have already demonstrated potential in fields such as quantum chemistry (33, 34), combinatorial optimization (35, 36), and generative modeling (37, 38). However, the field is constrained on two fronts: Fully quantum approaches are limited by noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) hardware noise and scalability (39), while quantum-inspired algorithms, being classical simulations, cannot natively leverage crucial quantum effects such as entanglement to efficiently represent the complex, nonlocal correlations found in such systems. These challenges limit the standalone utility of QML in scientific applications today. Instead, hybrid quantum-classical models provide a promising compromise, where quantum submodules work together with classical learning pipelines to improve expressivity, data efficiency, and physical fidelity. In quantum chemistry, this hybrid paradigm has proven feasible, notably through quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical coupling (40, 41), where classical force fields are augmented with quantum corrections. Within such frameworks, techniques such as quantum-selected configuration interaction (42) have been used to enhance accuracy while keeping the quantum resource requirements tractable. In the broader landscape of quantum computational fluid dynamics, progress has been made toward developing full quantum solvers for nonlinear PDEs. Recent works by Liu et al. (43) and Sanavio et al. (44, 45) have successfully applied Carleman linearization to the lattice Boltzmann equation, offering a promising pathway for simulating fluid flows at moderate Reynolds numbers. These approaches, typically using algorithms such as Harrow-Hassidim-Lloyd (HHL) (46), promise exponential speedups but generally necessitate deep circuits and fault-tolerant hardware.

Quantum-enhanced machine learning (QEML) combines the representational richness of quantum models with the scalability of classical learning. By leveraging uniquely quantum properties such as superposition and entanglement, QEML can explore richer feature spaces and capture complex correlations that are challenging for purely classical models. Recent successes in quantum-enhanced drug discovery (37), where hybrid quantum-classical generative models have produced experimentally validated candidates rivaling state-of-the-art classical methods, demonstrate the practical potential of QEML even before full quantum advantage is achieved. Despite these strengths, practical barriers remain. QEML pipelines require repeated quantum-classical communication during training and rely on costly quantum data-embedding and measurement steps, which slow computation and limit accessibility across research institutions.

AI is starting to beat doctors at making correct diagnoses

Researchers show that a type of AI known as a large language model often outperformed physicians at diagnosing complex and potentially life-threatening conditions, including decreased blood flow to the heart, even in the fast-moving stages of real ER care when information is limited.

In early ER cases, the model identified the correct or a very close diagnosis in about 67% of cases, compared with roughly 50% to 55% for physicians. And the technology is only getting better.


If you walk into an emergency room (ER) in 10 years, you’ll encounter a new type of caregiver: an artificial intelligence (AI) system designed to get you a diagnosis faster and help your care team make more informed decisions. While you sit in the waiting room, you’ll be hooked up to a blood pressure cuff that’s constantly and autonomously monitored. All the while, an AI agent will be listening in while you and your doctor talk about your symptoms, ready to flag any mistakes your physician makes or suggest next steps.

This vision of AI-assisted emergency health care may soon be reality. In a new study, researchers show that a type of AI known as a large language model (LLM) often outperformed physicians at diagnosing complex and potentially life-threatening conditions, including decreased blood flow to the heart, even in the fast-moving stages of real ER care when information is limited, they report today in Science. In early ER cases, the model identified the correct or a very close diagnosis in about 67% of cases, compared with roughly 50% to 55% for physicians. And the technology is only getting better.

“Evaluating AI in medicine demands both depth and breadth across different clinical tasks and settings,” and these authors were able to incorporate both in this study, says Shreya Johri, a computer scientist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute who was uninvolved with the new research. Still, she notes, wide adoption of these AI systems in health care will hinge on knowing the contexts in which they’re most reliable.

Biomimetic Microfibers for Myelin-Enhancer Screening and Neural Regeneration

Roles of lysosomal small-molecule transporters in metabolism and signaling

Small-molecule transporters of the lysosomal membrane export lysosomal catabolites for reuse in cell metabolism.

These transporters often show substrate promiscuity and, conversely, a given metabolite is often exported through distinct transport routes and sometimes in different states (e.g., single amino acids versus dipeptides).

Some lysosomal transporters import metabolites into the lumen. The combination of importers and exporters can create small-molecule shuttles across the lysosomal membrane, which regulate the lumen state.

Some lysosomal transporters participate in intracellular signaling cascades. sciencenewshighlights ScienceMission https://www.cell.com/trends/cell-biology/fulltext/S0962-8924(25)00222-3 https://sciencemission.com/lysosomal-small-molecule-transporters


Remyelination requires the precise wrapping of axons by oligodendrocyte processes, a critical step for restoring neural circuit function. However, a lack of quantitative systems that recapitulate axonal geometry and chemistry has limited mechanistic and pharmacological insights into myelin wrapping. Here, we present a bioengineered microfiber platform that mimics neurite architecture and surface chemistry, enabling high-content quantification of oligodendrocyte wrapping. Through compound screening, we identified dimemorfan, a clinically used sigma-1 receptor agonist, as a potent enhancer of myelin wrapping. Dimemorfan treatment accelerated remyelination and functional recovery in demyelinated mice and promoted myelin wrapping by human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived oligodendrocytes.

How an HIV/AIDS tragedy spurred human evolution

Researchers show that a type of AI known as a large language model often outperformed physicians at diagnosing complex and potentially life-threatening conditions, including decreased blood flow to the heart, even in the fast-moving stages of real ER care when information is limited.

In early ER cases, the model identified the correct or a very close diagnosis in about 67% of cases, compared with roughly 50% to 55% for physicians. And the technology is only getting better.


Before antiretroviral (ARV) drugs started to become widely available in KwaZulu-Natal in 2005, there was “kind of the perfect storm,” with several unusual factors coalescing to drive a devastating epidemic, says Philip Goulder, an immunologist at the University of Oxford who led the study, which appears today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. HIV had made few inroads into South Africa until the early 1990s, when an epidemic exploded in the heterosexual population, infecting about 40% of pregnant women in KwaZulu-Natal. (That astonishingly high prevalence persists today.) Because of a mix of genetics, limited health care, and possibly the viral subtype in circulation, infected people developed AIDS—when the destruction of the immune system threatens survival—exceptionally quickly, within about 4.5 years versus 10 years in North America.

Other studies have shown how infectious diseases, including malaria and tuberculosis, have altered the human genome. But those changes took thousands of years. “That’s what is quite exciting about this: You can see how rapidly evolution actually can occur,” Goulder says.

Similar evolutionary forces may have been at work in North America and Europe, but they are more difficult to see—and less likely to affect future generations. HIV prevalence in those regions is below 1%, and the hardest-hit group is men who have sex with men. “They are generally not a population that’s leaving behind as many offspring,” Worobey notes.

Neutrophils manufacture schizophrenia-linked protein, according to new research

The most common white blood cells in your body—immune cells called neutrophils—can make a protein nobody knew they were making, Stanford Medicine investigators have discovered. That unexpected sighting joins a growing list of hints tying schizophrenia, a disorder of the brain, to events occurring elsewhere in our bodies. The findings are summarized in a paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.

The newly noticed neutrophil nexus, as a source of the protein called C4A, links a long list of other observations that are somewhat puzzling when looked at in isolation: For example, large-scale population-genetic studies have identified C4A, already known to be produced mainly in the liver, as a pronounced risk factor in schizophrenia. People with schizophrenia tend to have increased numbers of neutrophils in their blood. And the most effective medication for schizophrenia inhibits neutrophils.

Schizophrenia affects one in every 100 persons globally almost without variation by geography or ethnicity. Its most noticeable symptoms are hallucinations, delusions and fixations. A fundamental feature of the disease is cognitive impairment: inability to think clearly, reduced working memory, disorganized thinking and behavior.

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