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Issues over the relocation of virologist Zhang Yongzhen's lab led to the total loss of some experiments, wrote a colleague on social media. (Dake Kang/AP via Alamy) | |||||
COVID trailblazer sleeping on the streetNoted Chinese virologist Zhang Yongzhen appears to be back at work following a dispute that saw him sleeping in the street outside his own lab. According to social media posts on Zhang's Weibo account, his group was given two days to relocate to a new lab that lacked sufficient biosafety controls. In 2020, Zhang and long-time collaborator Edward Holmes, a virologist in Australia, were first to publicly release the genome of SARS-CoV-2 — a choice credited as key to the swift development of COVID-19 vaccines. But Zhang's research output has since dwindled, which Holmes blames on an effort to sideline Zhang for unauthorized sharing of data. "It is heartbreaking to watch," he says. "It is unfathomable to me to have a scientist of that calibre sleeping outside his lab." Nature | 5 min readRead more: In 2020, Zhang featured in Nature's 10 — an annual list of people behind key developments in science, when he discussed why he shared the SARS-CoV-2 genome despite a Chinese government order forbidding it. | |||||
COVID immunity thwarts challenge trialsA 'challenge trial' early in the COVID-19 pandemic that aimed to infect 35 volunteers on purpose to study treatments ended after none of them got sick, a paper detailing the results has revealed. Fourteen of the participants then caught the Omicron strain after being released from quarantine. The strains used in challenge trials are produced under stringent conditions — a process that can take months. This can put them well out-of-date compared to emerging variants that can overcome widespread immunity. "We need a challenge strain that's more representative of what's circulating in the community," says vaccine scientist Anna Durbin. Nature | 5 min readReference: Lancet Microbe paper | |||||
Top Indian research institute in crisisIndia's leading social-science research institute, the Centre for Policy Research (CPR), is reeling after a January decision by the government — currently being challenged in court — banned it from taking money from international funders, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office. The tax authorities also levied the institution with a 10 crore rupees (US$1.2 million) bill. | |||||
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Could CAR-T cancer therapy cause cancer?Scientists are racing to find out whether chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies, one of the most celebrated new cancer treatments in decades, could be causing new malignancies. The US Food and Drug Administration received 33 reports of lymphomas among some 30,000 people who had been treated. It remains unclear how many, if any, of the new cancers came from the CAR T cells or from other therapies the patients had received. "Most cancer therapies can cause cancer. This is one of the paradoxes of our business," says paediatric oncologist Crystal Mackall. Nature | 11 min read | |||||
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The science of 3 Body ProblemThe Netflix series 3 Body Problem is a hit — but is the mind-bending tale of a group of alien-battling Oxford physicists good science? Nature asked Xavier Dumusque, a planetary scientist who has studied the three-star system Alpha Centauri, Younan Xia, a materials scientist who has worked with cutting-edge nanotechnologies and Matt Kenzie, a particle physicist and the scientific adviser for the show. Nature | 7 min read | |||||
Meet African challenges with African know-howLike many regions, Africa faces challenges to infrastructure, institutions and ecosystems. "But the current circumstances also offer an opportunity for African nations," argues agricultural economist Alfred Bizoza. "Despite — or perhaps because of — its challenges, Africa is already a hub for sustainable innovation." He calls for 'supported independence' of science and innovation in the continent, with the aim of designing innovations that work for African researchers and African people. Nature | 5 min read | |||||
Quote of the day"The striking paradox is that science tells us both that we're peripheral in the cosmic scheme of things and that we're central to the reality we uncover."The mystery of consciousness and the quirks of quantum physics are signs of a blind spot at the heart of science, write astronomer Adam Frank, theoretical physicist Marcelo Gleiser and philosopher Evan Thompson in their new book of the same name. (Big Think | 6 min read — or read a review of the book in Science, 5 min read) | |||||
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What matters in science | View this email in your browser Monday 11 December 2023 Hello Nature readers, Today, we gaze at what might be the largest known protein, learn about the first global deal on limiting emissions from food production and discover how publishing pressures create unusually prolific authors. A structure prediction for a massive protein discovered by computational biologist Jacob West-Roberts and his colleagues. (West-Roberts, J. et al./bioRxiv ) Not...
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