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Home - Biology - This weeks’ Key Highlights of Neuroscience science

Biology

This weeks’ Key Highlights of Neuroscience science

Last updated: April 27, 2026 4:01 am
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Key Highlights

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Researchers have created the first computer model of a minimal bacterial cell from the ground up, simulating its full lifecycle in 4D to reveal how basic cellular functions emerge from a minimal set of genes. This breakthrough provides a powerful new tool for understanding the fundamental principles of life and engineering synthetic organisms.
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A global study ranked 117 marine mammal species by their vulnerability to large plastic pollution, finding manatees and dugongs are most at risk due to their coastal habitats and feeding habits. This index is a vital tool for prioritizing conservation efforts and targeting research to protect the most vulnerable species from plastic waste.
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In a study across African savanna-forest boundaries, researchers found that soil texture (clay and silt content) is the main driver of soil carbon storage, not whether trees or grasses dominate the landscape. This finding challenges the assumption that simply planting trees on savannas will guarantee long-term carbon gains in the soil.
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A protein known for protecting chromosome ends, TRF2, actually plays a different role in neural stem cells by sticking to other parts of the DNA to keep the cells from turning into neurons too early. This discovery opens new avenues for understanding how the brain maintains its stem cells and how this process might go wrong in aging and neurodegenerative diseases.
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