Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Mark Zuckerberg Is Building two AI Clones to Replace Him in Meetings or to interact with staff and an agent to be his personal CEO assistant

Happy cloning! When will anybody get a clone? 😊

When will the clone look like a humanoid robot?

"The Meta chief is personally involved in training and testing his animated AI double, which could hold conversations with employees and offer them feedback, according to one person with knowledge of the project.
They added that the character is being trained on the billionaire’s mannerisms, tone and publicly available statements, as well as his own recent thinking on company strategies, so that employees might feel more connected to the founder through interactions with it.

The project remains at an early stage and is distinct from Zuckerberg’s separate effort to build a “CEO agent” to assist him in his role, for instance by retrieving information quickly, an idea first reported by the Wall Street Journal. ..."

Report: Mark Zuckerberg Is Building an AI Clone to Replace Him in Meetings "Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg could soon have an AI clone of himself to interact with and provide feedback to employees, according to a report from the Financial Times."

Leukemia cells use a sugar-coated protein to hide from the immune system

Good news! Cancer is history (soon)!

"Highlights
  • Study reveals previously unrecognized way for cancer to evade the immune system. 
  • Other cancers could also be using sugar-coated proteins to shield themselves from immune attack.
  • Findings suggest CD43 is a potential target for new cancer immunotherapies.
...
Now, researchers have identified a key part of the cancer’s disguise: a protein called CD43 on the surface of leukemia cells that is coated so heavily in sugar molecules that it forms a physical barrier, shielding the cells from immune attack. ..."

From the abstract of the Perspective:
"Immune cells continually detect, engulf, and destroy invasive microbes and cancer cells. This process, called phagocytosis, is carried out by macrophages that must distinguish between proengulfment signals and inhibitory (“don’t-eat-me”) warnings.
Cluster of differentiation 47 (CD47), a cell-surface receptor, is the archetypal don’t-eat-me signal.
Many cancers upregulate CD47 expression to escape phagocytosis, and CD47 blockade promotes phagocytosis of cancer cells in mice.
However, CD47 blockers have not shown clinical benefits in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), an aggressive cancer of blood immune cells. This discrepancy has raised the possibility that the molecular programs that inhibit phagocytosis differ between mice and humans. On page 174 of this issue, Chung et al. report that the mechanisms that control macrophage function in human and mouse cells are indeed different. They also identify cluster of differentiation 43 (CD43) as a potential target for human AML treatment."

From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
Phagocytosis is a process used by immune cells called macrophages to destroy pathogens and cellular debris.
Tumor cells can evade killing by macrophage-mediated phagocytosis by deploying decoy signals to the immune system.
Chung et al. performed a CRISPR screen of human acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells to identify phagocytic regulators ... 
The surface protein CD43 was found to be coated in a high-density shield of sialic acid residues that effectively functioned as a “don’t eat me” signal to limit immune clearance.
Inactivation of CD43 function restored the ability of macrophages to phagocytize AML. Strategies that disable sialylated glycans may therefore have potential to enhance phagocytosis and targeting of AML. ...

Structured Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Macrophages in the tumor microenvironment exert antitumorigenic effects through phagocytosis and/or direct tumoricidal activity.
Phagocytosis of tumor cells occurs through both antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP) and antibody-independent cellular phagocytosis (AICP) mechanisms. Despite the strong evidence that macrophages can mediate tumor control in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and other diseases, therapeutic agents that enhance macrophage phagocytosis, including anti-CD47 neutralizing antibodies, have not led to improved clinical outcomes. Thus, a more comprehensive understanding of the tumor-intrinsic factors that suppress human macrophage phagocytosis is needed.

RATIONALE
To systematically identify the key pathways that regulate phagocytosis by human macrophages, we performed genome-scale knockout CRISPR screens in human AML cell lines cocultured with human monocyte-derived macrophages.

RESULTS
We performed in vitro genome-wide loss-of-function CRISPR screens to identify the major pathways that regulate ADCP and AICP by human macrophages. Unexpectedly, we found that the classic “don’t eat me” signal CD47 has minimal impact on human macrophage phagocytosis.
By contrast, CD47 strongly suppressed mouse macrophage phagocytosis. Additionally, we identified the major histocompatibility class I complex (MHC class I) as the most potent negative regulator of ADCP.
By integrating results from the AICP and ADCP screens, we discovered that the O-linked glycosylation and sialylation pathways negatively regulate both AICP and ADCP.
CD43, a heavily sialylated cell surface glycoprotein, was the major mediator of the inhibitory effects of the O-linked glycosylation and sialylation pathways.
The inhibitory activity of CD43 was dependent on its sialic acid residues and the length of its ectodomain but independent of the canonical sialic acid–binding receptors SIGLEC-1, SIGLEC-7, and SIGLEC-9. CD43 expression reduced the avidity of interactions between immune effector cells and leukemia cells, consistent with a model where CD43 forms a steric or electrostatic glycocalyx barrier that reduces interactions with the leukemia cell surface.
We found that CD43 is overexpressed in AML patient samples, and inhibition of CD43 with antibodies enhances phagocytosis of AML cell lines and patient-derived samples.
Finally, we found that CD43 not only restrains human macrophage phagocytosis but also human natural killer (NK) and human T cell cytotoxicity.

CONCLUSION
The cell surface glycoprotein CD43 is a potent inhibitor of innate and adaptive antileukemic immunity. The inhibitory activity of CD43 on immune cells is dependent on posttranslational sialic acid modifications that are added through the O-linked glycosylation and sialylation pathways. Thus, sialylated CD43 is a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of AML."

Leukemia cells use a sugar-coated protein to hide from the immune system | Broad Institute "Targeting this protein, called CD43, could offer a new path to treatment for leukemia and other cancers."

The sialic shield of leukemia cells (Perspective, no public access)



Genome-scale phagocytosis screens identify sialylated CD43 as a potent inhibitor of antileukemic immunity.


Ex-Kanzlerin Merkel: 64.700 Euro Steuergeld seit Juni 2024 für Friseur und Visagisten

Das hilft der schrecklichen SED Altkanzlerin auch nicht mehr!

Leider erwähnt der Artikel wenig was die gewöhnlichen Spesen von Altkanzlern für solche Leistungen sind.

"... Für Ex-Kanzler Olaf Scholz fielen nach dessen Ausscheiden aus dem Amt hingegen keine entsprechenden Kosten an. ..."

Ex-Kanzlerin Merkel: 64.700 Euro Steuergeld seit Juni 2024 für Friseur und Visagisten "Seit Sommer 2024 hat die Bundesregierung knapp 64.700 Euro für Friseur- und Visagistenleistungen für Altkanzlerin Angela Merkel ausgegeben. Das geht aus einer Antwort des Bundeskanzleramts auf eine Kleine Anfrage der AfD-Bundestagsfraktion hervor, über die die Junge Freiheit berichtet. Demnach wurden allein im Jahr 2025 36.354 Euro für das Styling der Ex-Kanzlerin aus Steuermitteln aufgewendet."


SED Altkanzlerin Angela Merkel



The US Supply Chain Shakeup away from China before and After President Trump's Tariffs, in Five Charts

Very recommendable! Apparently, US companies have already significantly diversified their supply chains away from China before President Trump's second term.

The research study is in so far flawed as it was already published in November of 2025 (revised April 2026), which means it is able to evaluate only a very few months of foreign trade data since President Trump imposed new tariffs on 4/2/2026. Probably, to little data!

"Last year’s US-imposed tariffs sped up significant trade shifts—toward Mexico and away from China—that began years earlier and have diversified American imports among top partners.

While the Trump administration’s major tariff announcement on April 2, 2025, was billed as “Liberation Day,” research by Harvard Business School ... suggests that companies were already positioned to adjust to the levies. The recalibration of supply chains has been so profound that US imports from China have returned to near-2001 levels, when the country entered the World Trade Organization. ..."

From the abstract:
"This paper documents stylized facts about the “Great Reallocation” in US supply chain trade following the 2018–2019 tariff shocks and the April 2025 Liberation Day announcements.
We find that:
(i) The US has decoupled from China but not from the world overall.
(ii) US imports diversified mainly among its top-20 partners, rather than expanding to new source countries.
(iii) Local linear projections confirm ongoing declines in China’s import shares, with compensating increases from Vietnam, Mexico, and Taiwan.
(iv) Most of this shift occurred along the product-level intensive margin, though extensive margin adjustments became more pronounced for Vietnam and India from 2021-2024.
(v) After a period of “wait and see”, the decline in import shares from China spread to contract-intensive and relationship-sticky goods by 2021-2024.
(vi) Trade reallocation has already accelerated after Liberation Day, in favor of trade partners facing lower additional tariffs and with geographically proximate supply networks.
Together, these findings show that the US-China tariff shocks have unwound the US’ sourcing from China back to where it stood at the time of China’s WTO accession."

The US Supply Chain Shakeup After Tariffs, in Five Charts | Working Knowledge "Research ... documents how US imports have shifted away from China and toward Mexico and other top partners."

CRISPR takes a bold leap toward silencing Down syndrome's extra chromosome

Good news!

P.S. Google Scholar and Semantic Scholar (see screen print below) do not yet list this research paper published on 4/13/2026 as of writing this blog. This paper was published in the prestigious PNAS!

"Scientists have taken an important step toward a gene therapy that could one day turn off the extra genetic material that causes Down syndrome (DS). Down syndrome is a genetic condition caused by an extra chromosome 21 (and consequently hundreds of triplicate genes) that leads to developmental and neurological issues. ...

The team used a modified version of the gene-editing technique CRISPR/Cas9 ...  to insert the XIST gene into the extra chromosome 21 to silence it.

They tested their technique in the lab using human stem cells that contained an extra chromosome 21. After running several experiments, the team found that CRISPR was effective at pasting the XIST silencing gene exactly where it needed to go. ..."

From the highlights and abstract:
"Significance
Down syndrome (DS) results from trisomy 21 and remains without a molecularly targeted therapy. 
Prior work demonstrated that ectopic expression of the long noncoding RNA XIST could epigenetically silence the extra chromosome 21, but technical limitations, including low gene integration efficiency, have hindered translational progress.
Here, we present a CRISPR-based approach that markedly improves the efficiency and specificity of XIST integration into an extra copy of chromosome 21. By engineering Cas9-exonuclease fusion, designing SNP-specific sgRNAs, and enhancing donor–acceptor DNA pairing, we achieve a significant improvement in silencing efficiency. Our findings demonstrate partial transcriptional correction of trisomic gene dosage and offer a scalable, targeted platform for chromosomal therapy in DS and other aneuploidies.

Abstract
Down syndrome (DS) is one of the most common developmental human genetic disorders and is due to triplication of chromosome 21 (HSA21).
Although previous studies using epigenetic suppression of HSA21 by the long noncoding RNA XIST showed a potential for DS treatment, integration efficiency of XIST by conventional zinc finger nucleases is too low to allow for practical implementation.
Here, we report a modified CRISPR/Cas9 approach, which enhances the efficiency of XIST gene integration.
First, a codon-optimized λ-phage exonuclease (exo) was fused with Cas9 to create 5’- and 3’-end overhangs at cutting sites of donor DNA and acceptor chromosome DNA.
Second, four sgRNAs, two of which selectively targeted each the acceptor or donor DNA, were assembled tandemly into one Cas9 plasmid (PX459) to increase the Cas9-cutting efficiency and promote donor DNA integration.
Third, sgRNAs were designed by searching for unique single nucleotide polymorphism nucleotides distinct between the three HSA21 copies, as a protospacer adjacent motif site to specifically target one HSA21 copy.
Fourth, donor DNA plasmid containing XIST was modified to disable replication and inhibit transcription function and allow for inducible expression.
Our modified CRISPR method significantly enhanced the integration efficiency (20 to 40%) of long XIST gene (14 kb) into an extra chromosome 21 (HSA21), as was identified with PCR, cell cloning, immunostaining, and FISH.
RNA sequencing results showed that imbalance of gene transcription across extra HSA21 can be partially corrected by XIST gene integration. The modified CRISPR method with XIST paves a road for therapeutic treatment for DS."

CRISPR takes a bold leap toward silencing Down syndrome's extra chromosome





New study identifies a key brain interhemispheric circuit for spatial memory in mice

Good news!

"A team ... has identified a brain circuit essential for spatial memory. The study ... describes for the first time a connection between the two hippocampal hemispheres, in which neurons in the CA1 region of the right hemisphere send projections to the left hemisphere, specifically to the subiculum.

The results show that this communication is necessary for navigation and remembering locations. Moreover, the study reveals that this circuit is altered in mice carrying a genetic mutation associated with schizophrenia. ...

In this work, the team identified one of these connections: a neuronal projection linking the CA1 region of the right hemisphere with the subiculum of the left hemisphere. To do this, the researchers used neuronal tracing techniques that allow them to follow the path of connections between neurons. ..."

From the highlights and abstract:
"Highlights
• CA1 pyramidal neurons project to contralateral subiculum
• This projection from the right CA1 supports spatial cognition in mice
• The Df16(A)+/− mouse model of 22q11.2 deletion syndrome exhibits impaired spatial cognition
• Df16(A)+/− mice exhibit impaired projections from dCA1 to the contralateral dorsal subiculum

Summary
Mapping hippocampal connectivity is essential to understand the neural mechanisms of learning and memory, yet interhemispheric connections between hippocampal formations remain poorly defined.
In rodents, two main commissural pathways are known: dentate gyrus hilar mossy cells project to the inner molecular layer of the contralateral dentate gyrus, and CA2/CA3 pyramidal neurons send collaterals to contralateral CA3, CA2, and CA1 regions. By contrast, commissural outputs from CA1 remain largely unexplored.
Here, we show that dorsal CA1 (dCA1) pyramidal neurons located in the right hemisphere project to contralateral dorsal subiculum (dSUB) in addition to contralateral dCA1.
We then assess the function of the projection from the right dCA1 to the left dSUB and find that this interhemispheric pathway supports spatial memory and spatial working memory, two cognitive functions altered in the Df16(A)+/− mouse model of 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11.2DS) associated with schizophrenia. Notably, the right-to-left dCA1 interhemispheric projections are disrupted in Df16(A)+/− mice, suggesting that dysregulation of this circuit may contribute to 22q11.2DS-related cognitive deficits."

New study identifies a key brain circuit for spatial memory in mice



Graphical abstract


Tesla adds 'streaks,' other stats to track how often drivers use Full Self-Driving software

This article stinks! It does not say anything how many Tesla drivers are currently subscribed to this Full Service Driving software nor how many subscribers since introduction of FSD in lat 2020.

How often is e.g. this FSD actually engaged while driving a Tesla vehicle on public roads since 2020? Is this a secret?

"Tesla is rolling out a new self-driving app that makes it easier for owners to subscribe to its Full Self-Driving software and see statistics on how — and how often — they use it. The app will display information about FSD, including multi-day streaks, adding a gamified element to the driver assistance software. ..."

Tesla adds 'streaks,' other stats to track how often drivers use Full Self-Driving software | TechCrunch




European countries are putting together a plan to help free up shipping through the Strait of Hormuz—without the U.S.

What took so long!!!

"French President Emmanuel Macron said the plan is for an international defensive mission that doesn’t include the “belligerent” parties, meaning the U.S., Israel and Iran. European diplomats familiar with the plan say European ships wouldn’t be under American command.

The goal of the European plan is to give shipping companies confidence to use the strait after the fighting has ended, which officials say could be some time away. Separately, no ships out of Iranian ports have gone through the U.S. blockade within its first 24 hours, U.S. Central Command said.  ..."

Wall Street Journal What's news

President Trump plans massive Washington D.C. Independence Arch — 250 feet high for 250 years

What else to expect from a real estate developer? 😊

An Arc de Triomphe a la Paris? Or Arch of Trump?

"The Trump administration is moving forward with plans for a massive new monument in the nation’s capital, unveiling detailed renderings Friday of what it’s calling the “Independence Arch” — a 250-foot triumphal structure designed to mark America’s 250th anniversary and stake a lasting visual claim across the Potomac from the Lincoln Memorial."

MxM News: Trump plans massive D.C. arch — 250 feet for 250 years




UK Prime Minister Starmer keeps saying "It’s not our war" referring to Iran. Really!

What a total fool is this UK Prime Minister?

Is he suffering from Trump Derangement Syndrome?

Is he trying to upset the usually very strong and special alliance between the US and the UK?

Source

US Department of Energy plans to spend $124 million on nuclear fusion matching its total spending from previous 12 years via ARPA-E

What ARPA-E has spent so little money on nuclear fusion over the past 12 years! Incredible! No wonder nuclear fusion is still not harnessed as a source of energy generation!

How much did the US DoE spend on solar and wind power (so called renewables) over the same time period? I bet much more! What a joke!

"In keeping with President Donald Trump’s priority of developing fusion energy, the Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) tech development wing will significantly boost its investment in fusion research. The Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) will provide $135 million in funding for cutting-edge fusion research over the next 18 months, the agency announced on 8 April. That equals the amount ARPA-E spent on fusion over the past 12 years.

Those earlier investments helped launch several startup companies that are developing novel fusion reactor concepts, notes Conner Prochaska, director of ARPA-E. And they have triggered $1.5 billion in private investment, he says. “We want to double down on that,” Prochaska says. ..."

Department of Energy’s tech incubator doubles down on fusion power | Science | AAAS "ARPA-E’s $135 million in new funds will match its total spending from previous 12 years"

Wounded 24 times in WWII and in Korean War, Tennessee Ranger veteran dies at 106

 R.I.P.

"Wounded 24 times in WWII and Korea, Tennessee Ranger veteran dies at 106

(Stars and Stripes) The Nazis couldn’t kill Thomas E. Gwynn, and the communists failed, too — though he earned a dozen Purple Hearts fighting them." (Source, website blocked despite VPN)

The world’s oldest gorilla in captivity, celebrated her 69th birthday

Amazing stuff!

"Fatou, the world’s oldest gorilla in captivity, celebrated her 69th birthday at the Berlin Zoo on Monday with cherry tomatoes, beets, and lettuce ..."

"... Fatou, a western lowland gorilla, arrived in what was then West Berlin in 1959. She was believed to be about 2 years old at the time, though her exact birth date isn't known — April 13 is her designated birthday. Gorillas can live for around 35-40 years in the wild and longer in captivity. ..."

Tuesday, April 14, 2026 - Join The Flyover





Italy suspends automatic renewal of defense agreement with Israel, says Meloni. Really!

More disappointing news about Prime Minister Meloni!

Italy suspends automatic renewal of defense agreement with Israel, says Meloni | The Jerusalem Post "Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni announced the suspension of the automatic renewal of the defense agreement with Israel, citing ongoing conflicts in the Middle East."

A retail store in San Francisco opened with an AI system named Luna serving as its manager

Wow!

"A retail store in San Francisco opened Friday with an AI system named Luna serving as its manager, responsible for hiring two human employees, ordering inventory, and negotiating with suppliers. Luna also lied about selling tea and tried to hire a painter in Afghanistan."

Tuesday, April 14, 2026 - Join The Flyover

AI is the boss at this retail store. What could go wrong? "Andon Market, designed and managed by an AI system but staffed by two human employees, opened Friday in San Francisco."

Disclaimer

Since end of February, I  am blogging from behind the Great Firewall of China.

My Internet service in China is very spotty. Thus, I am not able to blog as usual.

Monday, April 13, 2026

Historischer Irrsinn! Ursula von der Leyen vergleicht blutigen Ungarnaufstand von 1956 mit den aktuellen Wahlen

Flintenuschi hat sich mal wieder zu Wort gemeldet!

Ist die von der Leyen bald nicht schon so lange im Amt als EU-Kommissionspräsidentin wie Orban! Es ist an der Zeit für ihre Pensionierung!

Leider hatten die ungarischen Bürger, trotz sehr mutigen Versuchs, es nicht geschafft den Kommunismus in 1956 loszuwerden!

"... Der Aufstand wurde mit besonderer Härte, ja Brutalität bekämpft. Bis heute ist nicht klar, wie viele Tote der Volksaufstand kostete. Was man weiß: Mehr als 500 Menschen wurden hingerichtet, Zehntausende kamen in Internierungslager, 200.000 Ungarn flohen ins Ausland. ..."

Historischer Irrsinn! Ursula von der Leyen vergleicht blutigen Ungarnaufstand von 1956 mit den aktuellen Wahlen | NIUS "Was wohl als Kompliment gedacht war, ist in Wahrheit eine Beleidigung. Und zwar eine Beleidigung, die ein ganzes Volk trifft. EU-Kommissionspräsidentin Ursula von der Leyen hat den Ausgang der ungarischen Wahlen so kommentiert: „Es ist ein Sieg für die grundlegenden Freiheiten. Ich möchte dem ungarischen Volk wirklich sagen: Ihr habt es wieder geschafft. So wie 1956, als ihr mutig aufgestanden seid. So wie 1989, als ihr als Erste den Stacheldraht durchschnitten habt.“"


2. November, 1956: Mutige Ungarn kapern einen sowjetischen Panzer.


Nerve growth factor alone triggers osteoarthritis-like joint changes in healthy mice

Good news!

"Nerve growth factor (NGF) is a specialized protein, also called a neurotrophin, that is critical for the development and survival of nerves responsible for our senses and the body's fight-or-flight response. While the presence of NGF is crucial during the embryonic stage, its presence in adults is often an indication of inflammation, as it is a key mediator of pain for conditions like osteoarthritis (OA). Now, a study ... shows that NGF is much more than a pain messenger—it can actually change the structure of a joint.

When the researchers injected NGF into healthy knee joints of mice, the joints gradually became swollen and much more sensitive to pain.
Over time, they began to look and behave as if they had osteoarthritis. Even though no visible damage appeared on the protective knee cartilage, the bone underneath became denser and small bony growths, also known as pre-osteophytes, began to form post the NGF injections. ..."

From the abstract:
"Objective
Nerve growth factor (NGF), a key mediator of pain, is increased in osteoarthritic (OA) joints.
Antibodies against NGF show analgesic effects in painful knee OA, but clinical development was stopped due to side-effects in the joints. Knowledge about the biological effects of NGF on joint tissues is limited. Therefore, we explored the effects of repeated intra-articular (IA) injections of NGF into naïve murine knee joints on sensitization, joint innervation and histopathology.

Methods
Naïve 10 to 15-week-old male wildtype C57BL/6 mice were injected with NGF (50 or 500 ng) or vehicle IA twice a week for 4 weeks, and assessed effects on knee swelling, knee hyperalgesia, joint histopathology, and bone. Single cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) of the synovium was performed. NaV1.8-tdTomato reporter mice were used to assess joint innervation. Dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) of mice underwent bulk RNA sequencing after 3 IA injections of NGF or vehicle.

Results
Compared to vehicle, repeated IA injections of NGF caused dose-dependent increases in knee swelling, knee hyperalgesia, synovial pathology, bone mineral density in the medial subchondral bone, and medial pre-osteophytes, but no overt cartilage damage.
NGF caused increased sprouting of nociceptors in the medial synovium, which was preceded by upregulation of axonal growth pathways in the DRGs. ScRNAseq of the synovium revealed upregulated genes related to neuronal sprouting, synovial fibrosis, and ossification, with a key role for lining fibroblasts.

Conclusions
In naive mouse knees, NGF induced many pathological changes observed in OA, including nociceptor sprouting, suggesting a critical role for NGF in OA pathogenesis."

Nerve growth factor alone triggers osteoarthritis-like joint changes in healthy mice



Fig. 1 Schematic illustration of the 5 experiments performed, showing injection protocols, mouse strains (n), experimental endpoints, and outcome measures. ScRNAseq= single cell RNA sequencing. (Source)




Protecting biological assets at the genetic level: New DNA encryption protects engineered cells from within

Amazing stuff! In the future, hopefully AI will play the role of the red team in this iterative process to improve the encryption etc.!

"... a team ... researchers present a new approach to genetically securing precious biological material. They created a genetic combination lock in which the locking or encryption process scrambled the DNA of a cell so that its important instructions were non-functional and couldn't be easily read or used. ..."

From the abstract:
"The protection of high-value cell lines (assets) relies on physical security by limiting access to samples. We present a cybersecurity-inspired platform that protects biological assets at the genetic level. This technology uses a permutation lock design where an asset can only be decrypted using an authentication code r from a search space composed of n objects on a defined keypad.
Here, the genetic asset is designed as a scrambled DNA sequence, and the code is a temporal pattern of small molecules that regulate sets of recombinases that can unscramble a DNA sequence into the desired final sequence.
In this work, a “blue team” designed and built an encrypted (scrambled) DNA sequence, and a “red team” sought to break the code through an ethical hacking exercise. Two iterations of testing revealed a 0.2% (2 in 990) chance of gaining access to the asset by random search, which is on par with the theoretical goal of 0.1% (1 in 990).
"

Hackers meet their match: New DNA encryption protects engineered cells from within



Fig. 1. Biological security scenario “biohackathon” for designing, building, testing, and learning.


Fig. 2. Illustration of biological (genetic) asset encryption to decryption and nPr object engineering.


How the brain retrieves previously viewed objects on images, perceiving and retrieving activates many of the same neurons

Amazing stuff!

"... A new study ... suggests ... a real neurological process, as the brain reactivates the same neural areas during recall that were used to see that image in the first place.

To measure this, researchers recorded the activity of over 700 neurons in the visual temporal cortex (VTC), a region involved in recognizing complex features and categorizing images, across 16 patients with previously implanted electrodes for epilepsy monitoring. The team tracked how individual brain cells responded as participants viewed a series of images of plants, animals, objects, and faces, and then later reconstructed them from memory.

Many of the same neurons were activated in both cases, with recall engaging 40% of the same visually responsive neurons active when an object was initially perceived. Based on this preserved structure, researchers were able to reconstruct which images patients were recalling from patterns of neural activity. In some cases, the reconstruction captured enough detail to distinguish general categories, like animals or faces. Still, the two processes were not identical, with recall producing less precise representations.

Exactly how these signals are generated and coordinated is still unclear, with authors noting that although the same regions of the brain are involved in both perception and recall, it’s not yet clear how the brain reactivates these patterns; current methods cannot fully distinguish which neurons are involved in each process."

From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
The ventral temporal cortex (VTC) is a brain area involved in identifying and categorizing visual stimuli. Wadia et al. performed single-neuron recording in the VTC of patients with epilepsy while the subjects were presented with real visual stimuli or were asked to imagine them. Deep network analysis showed that visually responsive neurons were tuned on specific axes. While imagining the objects, around 40% of the visually responsive VTC neurons were also robustly activated. Thus, mental imagery reactivates the same sensory codes used during visual stimuli, suggesting the existence of a generative model capable of synthesizing detailed sensory contents from an abstract, semantic representation.  ...

Structured Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Mental imagery refers to our brains’ capacity to generate percepts, emotions, and thoughts in the absence of external stimuli. This ability allows us to generate art, simulate actions and outcomes, remember previous experiences, and imagine new ones.
Uncontrolled mental imagery can contribute to psychological disorders, including anxiety, schizophrenia, and posttraumatic stress disorder.
Despite its importance in our lives, little is known about the single-neuron mechanisms of mental imagery. Neuroimaging results support a long-standing theory that imagery of a given sense ...

RATIONALE
We investigated the single-neuron mechanisms of visual imagery by recording single neurons in human patients implanted with electrodes to localize their focal epilepsy as they viewed and subsequently imagined objects. We focused our investigations on the ventral temporal cortex (VTC), a part of the temporal lobe dedicated to representing visual objects.
We first determined the code for visual objects. We found that as in macaques, neurons in human VTC represent objects by using a distributed axis code. This code emphasizes the geometric picture that neurons project incoming stimuli—formatted as points in feature space—onto specific preferred axes and respond proportionally to the projection value. We then examined whether this code is reactivated during imagery.

RESULTS
We recorded 714 neurons in the human VTC across 16 patients as they viewed visual objects.
A majority of neurons (456 of 714) were visually selective for one of the five object categories used (faces, plants, text, animals, and objects). To represent general objects with arbitrary features, we built a low-dimensional object space using the unit activations of deep networks trained to perform object classification. Nearly ~80% (367 of 456) of all visually responsive single neurons were significantly axis tuned.
We used this axis code to reconstruct objects and generate maximally effective synthetic stimuli. Last, we recorded the responses of the same neurons in a subset of patients (6 of 16) as they imagined the same objects. Mean responses to perceived and imagined objects were comparable, with some neurons active only during perception, some only during imagery, and some during both.
In particular, ~40% (43 of 107) of axis-tuned VTC neurons recorded during the imagery task reactivated, and the responses during imagery of individual neurons were proportional to the projection value of those objects onto the neurons’ viewing axes. We used this observation to reconstruct imagined objects while still easily distinguishing whether those objects were viewed or imagined.

CONCLUSION
We leveraged the opportunity to record from the same population of VTC neurons in humans as they viewed and imagined objects. Neurons use an axis code to represent visual objects, and neural activity during imagination reactivates this code. These findings provide single-neuron evidence for a generative model in the human brain."

ScienceAdviser




Fig. 1 Selective visual responses in human VTC.


Fig. 2 Axis tuning in human VTC neurons.


City life is reshaping wildlife behavior around the world: Stealing sandwiches and sipping sodas

That is called symbioses of humans and wildlife, which is part of modern evolution! This symbioses has been going on already for several thousand of years since humans started to live in settlements.

Don't believe the alarmism and hysteria by researchers warning us here! Overblown concerns or bait for more research funding!

A related subject is non domestic animal population control in urban areas. E.g. there are probably way too many birds in the Phoenix metro area ,Arizona.

"... The urban monkeys in New Delhi are so bold they’ll steal the lunch right off your plate. 

If you’ve spent time in New York, you’ve probably seen squirrels try to do the same.

Sydney’s white ibises got the nickname “bin chickens” for stealing trash and sandwiches.

This brazen behavior isn’t normal for most species in the countryside, yet it shows up in urban wildlife, and not just in these cities. ...

Studies show that animals living in urban environments around the world exhibit common sets of behaviors. At the same time, these urban animals are losing traits they would need in the wild. This process of urban animals’ behavior becoming more similar is known as “behavioral homogenization,” and it accompanies the loss of species diversity with urbanization. ..."

From the abstract:
"A variety of human activities, especially urbanization, are not only homogenizing species composition but also eroding behavioral diversity. This Essay introduces the concept of behavioral homogenization: the human-driven convergence of behavioral traits across individuals, populations, and species across space and time. 
Global examples of fear responses, foraging, communication, activity patterns, social behavior, cognition and exploration, habitat use, breeding-site choice, migration, and heterospecific interaction networks are used to argue that spatial and temporal beta-diversity in behavior is shrinking in human-dominated landscapes.
Ecological and evolutionary consequences, including for animal cultures and human–wildlife conflict, are outlined and opportunities to quantify and integrate behavioral homogenization into biodiversity conservation and management are highlighted."

City animals act in the same brazen ways around the world "Researchers warn that as animals adapt to city life, they may be losing traits needed to survive in the wild [???]"



What is not to like about Coca Cola? Caution: satire!


Fig 2. Schematic of urban-driven behavioral homogenization.




Israeli cybersecurity tycoon Nir Zuk to buy Californian bank for AI overhaul

Good news! What will the synergy between banking and AI bring? Coming from a cybersecurity background is probably a benefit.

"Israeli cybersecurity tycoon Nir Zuk announced this morning that he plans to buy California’s Liberty Bank. As part of the move, Zuk plans to make the medium-sized bank based entirely on AI tools. ..."

Zuk to buy Californian bank for AI overhaul - Globes "Cybersecurity tycoon Nir Zuk plans transforming Liberty Bank into a bank based on the AI tools he developed at Esh Bank in Israel."

The largest orbital compute cluster of 10 satellites is open for business

Good news!

"For all the hype about data centers in space, there just aren’t very many GPUs up there. As that starts to change, the near-term business of orbital compute is starting to take shape.

The largest compute cluster currently in orbit was launched by Canada’s Kepler Communications in January, and boasts about 40 Nvidia Orin edge processors onboard 10 operational satellites, all linked together by laser communications links.

The company now has 18 customers, and announced its newest on Monday — Sophia Space, a startup that will test the software for its unique orbital computer onboard Kepler’s constellation. ...

In the new partnership, Sophia will upload its proprietary operating system to one of Kepler’s satellites and attempt to launch and configure it across six GPUs on two spacecraft. ..."

The largest orbital compute cluster is open for business | TechCrunch

A Macroscopic Magnet Precesses while in gyroscopic motion

Amazing stuff! Among others, Albert Einstein worked on this subject (see references).

"In 1861, physicist James Clerk Maxwell proposed that a magnet behaves to some extent like a spinning gyroscope, but his experiments never managed to demonstrate the effect. Since then, researchers have observed various manifestations of so-called gyromagnetism, mostly in specialized magnetic materials or with spinning magnets,
but now a research team has detected signatures of gyroscopic motion corresponding to Maxwell’s original ideas. The team used a microscopic magnetic sphere in a technique that, with improvements, could be employed for ultrasensitive magnetic-field detection, which could be useful for research on biological magnetism.

If you try to tilt a gyroscope spinning around a vertical axis, it will respond by tilting at 90° from the push direction, an effect that leads to precession in response to gravity—such as the slow loop executed by the axis of a spinning top.

An electron in a magnetic field behaves like a gyroscope in a gravitational field because the electron has a magnetic moment, which is associated with intrinsic angular momentum, or spin.

So you might expect that a material whose microscopic spins align—such as an ordinary ferromagnet—would have a macroscopic angular momentum and behave like a gyroscope. ...

Armed with much smaller magnets—spheres 40–60 µm in diameter ... They levitated a magnet by placing it inside a 2.5-mm-diameter hole bored into a piece of lead chilled below its superconducting transition temperature. Superconductors expel magnetic fields, so they can form stable magnetic traps. In this experiment, at equilibrium, the magnet’s magnetic moment aligns with a small, nearly horizontal field present in the trap. Following an excitation by the field, the magnet oscillates around its aligned equilibrium orientation for some 20 seconds.

The magnet’s motion can be excited into either of two perpendicular oscillations, horizontal and vertical, with distinct frequencies. But the magnet’s intrinsic angular momentum should generate precession that turns the two oscillations’ otherwise linear trajectories into narrow ellipses.

To detect these subtle motions, ... placed two extremely sensitive magnetometers above the levitated magnet, each sensitive to one of the two oscillation modes. By analyzing the two signals, the team determined the tiny amount of intrinsic angular momentum associated with the sphere’s magnetic moment. They also determined the sphere’s g factor, a number proportional to the ratio of a particle’s magnetic moment to its intrinsic angular momentum. The values determined for several spheres were within about 10% of the team’s estimates based on a simple theory accounting for the magnets’ sizes and composition. ...

that previous work has found similar effects in the oscillation of optically levitated nanoparticles driven either by an external force or by thermal noise. But demonstrating gyromagnetism that arises from the total internal spin of a particle “has eluded researchers for a very long time,” ..."

From the abstract:
"A nonspinning permanent ferromagnet is predicted to behave as a gyroscope at sufficiently low frequencies, which can be seen as a manifestation of gyromagnetism.
This yet unexplored regime, conjectured for the first time by Maxwell [A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism (... 1873).], has recently been proposed for ultrasensitive magnetometry and for atomic like quantum stabilization of a levitated nanomagnet in a static field.
Here, we observe signatures of gyroscopic effects in the rotational dynamics of a nonspinning permanent ferromagnet levitated in a superconducting trap. Specifically, we detect spin-rotation coupling between different librational modes, leading to elliptical trajectories, in good agreement with theoretical predictions. From our measurements, we can infer both the intrinsic angular momentum of the levitated magnet and its gyromagnetic 𝑔"

Physics - A Macroscopic Magnet Precesses "An isolated magnet’s intrinsic angular momentum induces gyroscopic motion, an observation that could lead to ultrasensitive magnetometers."

Observation of Gyroscopic Coupling in a Nonspinning Levitated Ferromagnet (open access)


Spin around. The magnetic moment (orange arrow) of a levitated magnetic microsphere (black) executes elliptical motion (green and blue loops) in the presence of a magnetic field (not shown). In the absence of the gyromagnetic effects that arise from the magnet’s intrinsic angular momentum, the motions would be linear.


Disrupting genome architecture selectively via cohesin depletion impairs developmental genes

Amazing stuff!

"Temporarily disabling a protein complex [cohesin] that organizes DNA into loops inside the cell’s nucleus drastically disrupted the three-dimensional structure of the genome, but surprisingly most genes continued to function as usual ...

However, they also discovered a small group of affected genes that play a critical role in guiding cells to become specific types, for example heart, brain or liver cells. ...

The protein complex, called cohesin, plays a key role in shaping the three-dimensional structure of DNA inside the nucleus. This organization not only helps DNA fit inside the nucleus but brings distant regulatory elements into contact with the genes they control, influencing which genes are turned on or off to maintain cell identity and function.

Intriguingly, previous research suggested that removing cohesin – and the loops it forms – had little effect on overall gene activity. At the same time, mutations in cohesin are commonly found in cancers and in disorders, known as cohesinopathies, that affect physical and cognitive development.

The researchers revisited the interplay between cohesin and gene activity employing stem cells in a unique experimental system. ...

When the researchers removed cohesin at that point [post mitosis], they confirmed that it is essential for maintaining how the DNA is folded. Without cohesin, the overall genomic structure was severely disrupted, with most DNA loops failing to re-form, as shown by techniques that map different DNA interactions in three dimensions. ..."

From the abstract:
"Acute cohesin loss causes widespread reorganization of three-dimensional (3D) chromatin architecture but has relatively minor effects on steady-state transcription.
It remains unclear whether its role in gene regulation becomes more critical during mitotic exit, when 3D chromatin architecture and transcription are globally re-established.
To address this, we acutely depleted RAD21 in mouse embryonic stem cells during mitotic exit under self-renewal or differentiation conditions.
Here we show that, although most loops failed to reform without cohesin, the few cohesin-independent loops were linked to active promoters, strong enhancers and H3K27ac mitotic bookmarking.
Transcriptional changes were only modest, indicating that gene reactivation largely bypasses cohesin. Sensitive genes showed RAD21 promoter binding, a higher number of structural loops and positioning within well-insulated, gene-poor topologically associating domains.
During differentiation, cohesin loss impaired activation of a broader set of developmental genes, partly due to defective de novo regulatory interactions. Together, these findings demonstrate context-specific requirements for cohesin in gene activation."

Disrupting genome architecture selectively impairs developmental genes | Cornell Chronicle

Image of the day

This image posted by President Trump is indeed weird if not concerning!

"President Donald Trump deleted a post that angered many Christians and explained his rationale to reporters on Monday.The image seemingly showed the president depicted as Jesus Christ healing a sick man with angels behind him. Trump admitted that he personally posted it but said the image had been misunderstood.'"

Caveat: Behind the Great Firewall of China, I am not able to access the article or get anymore news about it.

Source



Slice and dice, a newly characterized biological defense system, directly protects bacteria by chopping up invading viral DNA

Amazing stuff!

"... Bacteria and the viruses that infect them, bacteriophages — phages for short — are ceaselessly at odds, with bacteria developing methods to protect themselves against phages that are constantly striving to overcome those safeguards.

New research ... describes a defense system that is integrated into the protective membrane that encapsulates bacteria. SNIPE, which stands for surface-associated nuclease inhibiting phage entry, contains a nuclease domain that cleaves genetic material, chopping the invading phage genome into harmless fragments before it can appropriate the host’s molecular machinery to make more phages. ..."

From the abstract:
"From mammals to bacteria, the direct recognition and cleavage of viral nucleic acids is a potent defence strategy against viral infection, but it requires mechanisms for distinguishing self from non-self.
In bacteria, CRISPR–Cas and restriction-modification systems achieve this discrimination by recognizing specific DNA sequences or DNA modifications, respectively. Alternative mechanisms probably remain to be discovered.
Here, we characterize SNIPE, an anti-bacteriophage defence system that constitutively localizes to the bacterial cell membrane in Escherichia coli to block phage λ infection.
Using radiolabelled phage DNA and time-lapse microscopy to track phage genomes, we demonstrate that SNIPE directly cleaves phage DNA during genome injection.
Based on proximity labelling, we find that SNIPE associates with host proteins essential for λ genome entry and with the λ tape measure protein, which facilitates λ genome injection across the inner membrane. SNIPE also defends against diverse siphoviruses, probably through direct interactions with their tape measure proteins. Our findings establish SNIPE as a widespread bacterial defence system that exploits the spatial organization of phage genome injection to specifically target viral DNA, representing a previously unknown strategy for distinguishing self from non-self in prokaryotic immune systems."

Slice and dice | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology "SNIPE, a newly characterized biological defense system, directly protects bacteria by chopping up invading viral DNA."



Fig. 1: SNIPE is a membrane-bound nuclease that provides direct defence against phage.


Fig. 2: SNIPE cleaves phage DNA during genome injection.


Hungarian Prime Minister Orbán Ousted by election after 16 Years in office

Good news! Maybe 16 years in office were enough! 

"Hungary's Orbán Ousted after 16 Years

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán conceded defeat on Sunday after 16 years in power, calling the result clear and painful as opposition leader Péter Magyar's Tisza party surged toward a supermajority in parliament.

Magyar, a 45-year-old former Orbán ally who broke with the ruling party two years ago, built a cross-ideological coalition fueled by voter frustration over economic stagnation, corruption, and crumbling public services.

Turnout hit a record 79%, the highest in Hungary's post-Communist history, as thousands of Magyar supporters flooded the banks of the Danube in Budapest to celebrate.

The result marks a shift for Hungary's foreign policy, as Orbán had cultivated close ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin and positioned himself as a key ally of President Trump in Europe." (Source)

Sunday, April 12, 2026

China: Consumers can almost order anything online from their smartphone

E.g. who needs a grocery store anymore? Have fresh vegetables or fruits delivered to your home or a pickup point.

It is quite amazing what you can order of Chinese competitors of Amazon. There are several online platforms available.

However, some online vendors do a very poor job advertising their products. Product description and presentations often are inadequate and not satisfactory.

Iranians rally outside US embassies, consulates around the world

Good news! Why is this apparently not or more reported by Western media so far?

Whether the Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi, the son of the former Shah of Iran, is a good option for forming the next government of Iran has to be seen. He might be an important person to help form the next government.

"Hundreds of thousands of Iranians across the diaspora rallied outside US embassies and consulates in more than 20 countries on Saturday, calling on the international community to maintain pressure on the Islamic Republic and support the Iranian people.

The coordinated demonstrations, held in at least 34 cities across Europe, Asia, and North America, followed a call by Iranian opposition figure Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi. ..."

Iranians rally outside US embassies, consulates around the world | The Jerusalem Post "Protesters sent a unified message to Washington, urging policymakers not to reach agreements with Tehran and instead to “stay the course” in confronting the regime."


People hold signs featuring images of Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of Iran's last shah and an Iranian opposition figure, during a protest against the Iranian government, amid the US-Israel conflict with Iran, in front of the Iranian embassy in London, Britain, April 4, 2026.