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Tarek MansourReaders as always I’m very happy to have the privilege of being in your inbox again for this the 31st edition of the White Pill, the local supercluster’s most excellent space, science, engineering, medicine, and hard technology newsletter. Some great stuff this week: we grew plants in a lunar regolith analog, 3D printed a soft robot hand with ligaments, bones, and tendons, developed deep learning algos to selectively cancel noise, stopped Parkinson’s in mice, and concluded — with pretty strong conviction — that our earth has a pulse.
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Alright, let’s get to it.
P.S. The PW crew has some time off around Thanksgiving, so this is the last White Pill until December. Have a warm and wonderful holiday with your loved ones, and I’ll see you on the other side.
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Science-ing the sh*t out of lunar regolith (moon dirt). Last year, a team of American scientists were able to grow a weed called thale cress (pictured above) in a genuine lunar regolith sample (who knew?), but “not well enough for plants to mature and produce food.” Recently, researchers at the China Agricultural University tested three types of bacteria in a lunar soil stand-in, and found that the bacteria enhanced the availability of the vital plant nutrient phosphorous, which gave plants “more robust roots, longer stems and bigger leaves compared to untreated samples.” Really cool. (Phys.org)
Wooden satellites. NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) are planning to launch a (mostly) wooden satellite called LignoSat into orbit next summer. Their 10-month test of the wood they plan to use in the harsh environment of space — where it was exposed to intense cosmic rays and extreme temperature fluctuations — returned “no decomposition or deformations, such as cracking, warping, peeling or surface damage.” The idea is that if LingoSat, which will be a cube the size of a coffee cup, is resilient enough, it could be another option for satellite makers to use. One that would easily burn up in the atmosphere upon reentry. (Space.com)
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3D printed, soft, robotic hands. Using a new 3D printing technique that “makes it easy to combine soft, elastic, and rigid materials… [to] create delicate structures and parts with cavities,” researchers have printed a ‘soft’ robotic hand (pictured above) with ligaments, bones, and tendons made out of polymers with different stiffnesses — and they did it in one go instead of having to assemble the parts after the fact. This could lead to better prosthetics and cooler robots. Here’s a video of the 3D printing process and robot hands in action. (ETH Zurich)
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The White Pill Investment Index tracks investments in companies developing interesting, exciting, forward-thinking products. Deals are sourced using a combination of Pitchbook and reach outs to each company.
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Skin printing. Scientists at New York’s Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 3D printed hair follicles into lab-grown human skin, a first for the field of human skin growing 👻. This is actually, potentially, a big step toward growing more realistic skin in the lab for use in treating burn victims and other medical conditions, as hair follicles “play an important role in skin healing and function […] [they] produce sweat, [help] regulate body temperature, and they contain stem cells that help skin heal.” Trippy description of how exactly this works:
The scientists begin by allowing samples of skin and follicle cells to divide and multiply in the lab until there are enough printable cells. Next, the researchers mix each type of cell with proteins and other materials to create the "bio-ink" used by the printer. Using an extremely thin needle to deposit the bio-ink, the printer builds the skin layer by layer, while also creating channels for depositing the hair cells. Over time, the skin cells migrate to these channels surrounding the hair cells, mirroring the follicle structures present in real skin.
Halting Parkinson’s in mice. Researchers at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center recently removed a gene in mice that produces the enzyme USP30, which plays a role in killing off dopamine cells — a process central to the progression of Parkinson’s disease — and observed that the mice were essentially “protected against the development” of the disease. Then, in a second set of experiments, the team validated their initial findings by using a molecule to prevent the enzyme’s action in dopamine-producing neurons. From David K. Simon, MD, Ph.D., director of the Parkinson's Disease & Movement Disorders Center at BIDMC and professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School: “The two experimental strategies together are much more convincing than either alone. Together, our very significant findings support the idea that reducing USP30 warrants further testing for its potentially disease-modifying effects in [Parkinson’s disease].” (MedicalXpress)
Another type of brain cell sends signals, not just neurons. Looks like our model for how the brain works needs a small update. Swiss neuroscientists recently found that one type of glia — normally a class of cells that support neurons, but don’t communicate — communicate with neurons through glutamate, a common neurotransmitter. These type of glia cells seem to occur in fairly small numbers, and only in certain areas of the brain, which is why they were missed until now. What’s next? From Scientific American:
First, neuroscientists must map where in the brain these special cells can be found. Because [study co-author] Volterra's team located them in structures associated with memory, the researchers plan to examine data from people with Alzheimer's disease to see whether, and how, their signaling astrocytes are altered. “We know they're located in memory circuits, so the next question is, What happens in dementia?” Volterra says. “If these cells are modified, they become a new target” for research.
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The earth’s pulse. For some time it’s been suspected that events on the geological time scale — like mass extinctions, major sea-level fluctuations, continent scale eruptions of flood basalt, etc. — tend to correlate together, and seem to have a periodicity of around 26 to 30 million years. A new paper looking at 89 well understood geological events over the past 260 million years lends further weight to this idea of periodic catastrophic pulses occurring. Nobody is sure yet what the cause, or (more likely) causes are. Theories range from some unknown cycle of mantle activity and plate tectonics, to where the solar system is in the galaxy, to periodic comet strikes, or rogue stars. Not to worry though, we likely have about 20 million years before the next pulse. 😬 (Science Alert)
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